S - prestige; xs - : : : ors ; * “ rok » re 3 . . i % f ‘ es ‘ VOL. XV, NO. 20 » BRYN MAWR (AND WAYNE), a os APRIL 24, 192 29 E PRICE, 10 CENTS Our Generation , Needs New Code We Must Have Substitute for Conventional, Says Dr. Wicks. PRAISES © ORIGINALITY The , Rev. Robert Russell Wicks, D. D., Dean of the University Chapel at Princeton, spoke on What. Substitute for. Conventional Morality? .Tuesday evening in the common room in Good* hart Hall. We are all of us, Dr. Wicks.‘says, living in a generation: where we have ceased. to respect conventional respec- tability. It seems: to have lost its its: genuineness is suspected; and we are no longer interested in the old, ordinary goodnéss. However, quite obviously we will always need a cer- tain amount of decency to get along together. | become standardized so that even- tually it reaches a. point where it is not too high and not-too low. When people arrive’ at this standard of de- cency they begin to.grow-stale. So in ehurches you find a lazy kind of good- ness in members of the congregation who get shocked at swearing, yet who take for granted sich things as the World- War-and: the-oil-scandal which took place under the guise of respec- tability. Christ himself lost his life at the hands of the most respéctable church people in Jerusalem. To have this kind of respectability _ put things over on us_is_ repulsive. What can we put in its place? “Moral originality seems to be the only al- ternative. We find this nicely exem- . plified in the parable “of the Good own Samaritan. The interesting . thing ~“about~the -hero.ofthis__piece is his originality; he did » something unex- pected; something fine, quite on his initiative. “Very like the Good Samaritan’ was a Dartmouth man who refused to sign a thirty-thousand-dol- ~--lar“ contract for professional football playing on the ground that it took the ten other men on his team to help him make his reputation, He said that he would not feel right in clearing up thirty thousand on. a_ reputation which was not his own. An _ origi- ~ nality such as was in the conscience . poraries throughout the ages. of that man is in many: those who will remember. you when others. will walk by ofthe other side and forget you; -and~ those» who~ will every day create new things arid evolve new ideas in the schools, churches and businesses, with which bai are’ asso- ciated. Perhaps here it should be point out that-mere revolt from convention- ality is not real originality. Some- times it is just copying our contem-. instead of following . our ancestors. Much moral experimenta- tion today is not any deeper than a passing fad. All real originality is the working out of some fundamental abiding principles which we cannot change—not just the following of a whim. Now what are these certain funda- mental principles? First of all, live. in a universe which has an un- written constitution. As L. P. Jacks once wrote, “You can talk about Tight and wrong “and the universe won ’t say anything to you, but you can act it out and then the desirable and un- desirable comes out.” If such is the case it is not hard to believe that this universe is set so that selfishness will always work out’ to defeat its own end. Secondly, there is soinething tireless in the: unigerse.. We all get tired—we get sick of’ourselves. It has been thus In 1830:it_was_| "said that. _we-had=almost gone to to the == “devil; ; and five thousand, seven hun- dred and twenty-six years ago some one wrote that the world had fallen upon wicked times, young people _were .no longer respectful to their ‘CONTINUED ON- THE. SIXTH PAGE now unreal ways of talking of |. But this decency tends to. .. —~ Ld Our New Type ' THis week the printers “of the - CoLLeceE News have set the paper on three shiny new linotype ma- chines, equipped with type faces varying somewhat from the former style. 5) & -The body of the paper’ is_now set in “old style,” very similar to the former type. , The head- ing, however, have been com- pletely changed, with “Cloister” selected as the face—lighter than the former type. This same style will gradually be used in the advertisements. The printers have promised that when the new plant is’ in, full production in the fall the Coireée News. will match in ap- “ pearance any college paper in the eountry. ~ p The Nations Change and Methods Show a Universal: Desire for Attitudes Peace. April 16, Monsieur Pierre de Lanux, Director of the Paris Information Office. of the League of Nations, spoke in the Com- On. Tuesday afternoon, subject of international interest, “Mod- ern Manners in Foreign Policy.” he talk, delivered in an informal manner by the brilliant young writer, editor and lecturer, attempted to show that the transformation in manners, or the new diplomacy, isthe sign of new re- lationships in, foreign affairs. For four or five years after the Armistice the psychology of — nations didn’t change noticeably. These was, for instande, a deadlock between France and—Germany, with mutual . distrust and no peace progress, In 1923 the Ldeadlock -was international. When France was occupying the Ruhr, Lord Curzon was . Foreign — Minister. in England and the Dawes plan had just been devised. In western Europe people distrusted- the League’s capa- bility for reorganizing. the world. From this distrust arose a demand to make use of the. League. of Nations and the. World Court, with all their principles, so in 1924 really tepresenta- tive delegations were sent from all Europe to the League. The whole movement was given a forward push | carno and the Dawes plan; by. the end of 1925 there had been a gréat progress. in the relations between France, Germany and England. In September, 1926, Germany became a ue. member and gave the League ‘a lasting foundation, with the Allies and the ex-enemy countries working together’ for a common cause. Ger- many’s entrance ~ established the League’s authority, because the Ger- mans adopted a positive attitude of co-operation and suppressed the nega- tive elements which had been charac- teristic ‘of their policy from 1920 to 1925. They formally accepted the League’s ruling on boundaries and other questions in order that they e| might} further other moré important demands. Germany Chooses Peace At the Economy Conference of the. League. in 1927 the German attitude was definitely constructive, and put an end to the fear that Germany might form an alliance with Russia and othe» discontented nations. Ger- ‘many’ had to choose between Geneva and Rapallo, between the League of Nations and Bolshevism, and_ since world. organization by Bolshevism meant revolution in every country, Germany chose peace under the | League. In the last two years France, Dr. mons Room of Goodhart Hall on al. by the signing of’the ~ Freaty--ef~- -Lo-l. Critsade Continues , Breasted _ Illustrates .. America’s Excavations fh the . . Near’ Bast. Oe On Friday, April 19, in Goodhart Pro. James H. Breasted the Crusade with his second topi Auditorium, ew he Scientific. Responsibility of America in the, Near « East and the ‘Salvaging of the “Evidence.” trated by lantern. slides. continued his lectures on The lecture was illus- “We ought to begin this evening that crusade in the Near East to which the discussion of a week ago was a rather long preliminary-@jggrant you,’ Professor. Breasted: began, and went on to’ say that when you gain some adequate impression of the place of the Near East in human development you realize that it involved vast stages, in the development of the earth, one after another. In prehistoric condi- tions Egypt did not suffer ftom the rigors of Arctic ice %s did the Eufo- peans; it is in the lower part of the northwest quadrant that vast - quari- tities of early remains are going to rapid: qtstruction—destruction that is appalling on the Nile and also in Asia. There is an enormously large amount, of material to be rescued, and it cannot be said that any comprehen- sive plan has been evolved for saving these records. Inyéstigation with a unified command is negessary to place on exhibition how we came to be what we are, Was Organized and at .present—it--has six expeditions in the Near East cov- ering an.area of fifteen hundred to two thousand miles. One of-these groups is on the upper Tigris in. Assyria and Palestine; there are three at work in Asia and three in Egypt. The first expedition was sent out ten years ago when. the Oriental Institute had an income of only $10,000. The project gaye an invaluable impression of what ought to be done. It was -quite ‘evi- dent from the beginning that, if we were to find the desired traces, a chronological survey was. necessary. The personnel was made up of geolo- gists as the extended investigation harked back to stratified- records. Among them were two geologists of Oxford training, Dr. Sanford and Dr. Archell. Excavations in Fayum _., ~ Dr. Sanford discovered in one of aa lower terraces along the Nile-the ‘first embedded-flint implements. This gave evidence that man had lived there be- fore that terrace was laid down, and that human handiwork came out of an age which carries back to an enor- mously remote antiquity. © Such re- search is characteristic of the investi- gation. In upper Egypt there are a series of terraces containing these im-|, plements, and there is another, toward lower “Egypt. In upper Egypt the highest terrace of black tertiary soil is ata height of orie hundred and fifty feet above the surface Sy the Nile; and is sterile of human refffains. But ata height of one hundred feet. relics are plentifully found. The implements in this terrace are the crudest in form, and advancefhent in ingenuity is seen |from_those_ unearthed below: — When the river was at the one-hundred- foot-| level it’ was flowing on rock bottom; and sifhce the time of the ancient men it has‘ cut through one hundred verti- cal feet of solid rock, the Avhole process requiring a thousand years Extraordinary results were achieved to the credit of Dr. Sanford and Dr. Archell, who turned our attention to the great depression on the.west bank of the Nile, sixty miles south of Cairo. This depression, thirty’ miles long, and For that “reason the. Oriental! Institute of the University of Chicago! Mrs. Manning Explains Educational Values Mrs. Manning opened chapel on Mon- day ‘morning, wApril. 22, by saying. that this is the time of year when she always thinks about improvements in curricu- lum. She found the summary of the book, “Incentives to Study,” in last week’s News very interesting, ard ad- wf vises everyone to read it catefully. The general conclusions she declared good, though the book itself is: not scientific. The heliefs. of one university, such as Yale, in this instance, are suggestive rather than final. There ‘is stress well placed on the frame of mind of the stu- dent entering college, and, \ wisely "| enough, there are no ‘remarks about in- spiring teaching. A. person. will prob- ably only meet two or three people in the whole course of her life, who will actually inspire her to learn. Mrs. Man- ning feels that inspiring students are 4more_ important than inspiring teach- ers, but she pointed outs that this is in a way a‘paradox, since a pupil is the product of her past education.* The “primary impuls@\to learn is botnd to come- from the older “generation, but a great deal rests with the students. The students who are definitely after* some- thing have the incentive to leave before they get to college. The New Republic recently published an article on “The Aims of Education,” by..Mr,—Whitehead, —_It—is-written— ina pleasant and suggestiye way ‘with -a philosophical background. His ideas are not- really new; “Do not teach too many subjects, and teach thoroughly.” He advises against treating inert ideas and points out that logic and information -should—-be—treated—in—new—combina- tions. oo = He treats examinations from the English point .of view, and _ reacts against the English system as would be’ expected from an Englishman. Mrs. Manning’ pointed out that we see the good results’ of “the English “and French systems of. education, while they see the good points of ours. There_isa trend toward examina- tions set by outside teachers, but Mr. set, by the instructor who has given the course: He is the—only—person who can see if. the student is giving back .new.—.combinations of ideas. Course examinations tend to make’ us think in small packets, but Mrs. Man- ning thinks they serve a definite pur- pose if one can get anything new by that means. It is possible to reach a saturation. point, -where - preparation +becomes—tost;-but= Adearning for exanis really. teaches” us to-see~things in new combinations. and "to ee. the field as a whole. The saturation point -does not usually coiie While the student is an_ undergraduate. Mrs. Manning concluded that there is more value in seeing the cause and effect working in the whole field than in gathering material for a report and in drawing conclusions. New com- binations of ideas are the best things that can be derived fram undergrad- uate work and examinations are the best way of achieving this end. — Miss Schenk Is Honored Members of the French Club, grad- uate students in French and members of the French faculty are invited to a_tea in Wyndham at four- thirty on Monday, April 9. ‘The tea’ is. being given in honor of Miss Schenck, who ‘has been named “officer d’academie” by .the French government. Miss Schenck has been so honored in rec- ognition of her distinguished services in spreading French en her educational work as héad of the French department at Bryn Mawr. FShe has also. been instrumental in or- fyanizing’ a committee to Supply books for: the library. which supplements. the Germany, England and the United States have come to know that there ‘can be no peace; and a world ma- jority today, though approaching the question from different angles, wants. the abolition of war. Since. 1924 in the form of a maple-leaf with the stem running to the Nile valley, is the Fayum, whose: origin eluded the geologists until Sanford and Archell attacked it. . Their. attention was di- rected to the divide between the de- CONTINUED ON THE THIRD FACE CONTINUED oN THE FIFTH PAGE niagara (Sue aeemeeees aneceemameeene’ recently _ created chair. of American literature at ‘the Sorbonne. M. René Weiller, ‘French Consul at Philadel- phia, will be present at the tea, and will himself present to Miss Schenck the decoration which accompanies her } diploma: —- sees = oe Whitehead says that they should be’ |Concert Ends Bryn Mawr.Series ee, eee Bach Concerto and Brahms Trio sMost Pleasing of Selections. —_——— PROGRAM BADLY. MASSED, ‘A comparatively: small audiénce “at-: tended the last of the Goodhart Series, a. concert by Naoum Blinder, violin; Anton’Horner, horn; Louis Saslawsky, baritone; and Horace Alwyne, piano- forte, given in the Auditorium of |Goodhart Hall on Wédnesday evening, April 17. The program, in spite of the excellence of the individual artists, was too long, and it was_ ineffectively massed, the ‘more’ substantial selec- tions being grouped at the beginning, the lighter ‘numbers following in a lin- gering anticlimax. The height of the evening was reached in the Brahms trio with its ‘calm reserve and sober magnificence, The unusual gcombination of .instru- ments was ai ai and the exe- cution of the artists, individually and as_members of,a trio,-was faultless—in its smoothness and harmony. . The mellow dignity of the Andante} the rapid movement of the Scherzo; the stateliness of the Adagio, with its in- dividual repetitions of the theme for each of the: instruments, and its final brief massing of emotions; and the brighter, contrasting flow of the Alle- gro followed each other in perfect con- tinuity. - The smoothness of the whole ‘was broken here, however, and also: in ‘the Concerto, by the rude inter- ruptionofapplause after: the Separate. _| movements. : rN The Concerto, while less intellectual than much of Bach’s. music, ° still , showed the. restraint of mature © thought mingled with its depth of emotion, Mr. Blinder’s interpretation was, charactérizéd by a pleasing sim- plicity, and warmth and an unusual feeling for phrase. Th® second violin group -wes—-tight¢r and less conse- quential in nature. “Lotus Land” by Cyril Scott-Krisler was notable for its fanciful suggestion of lethargy, and the \ “Scherzo” of Prokofieff was distin- guished by its kaleidoscopic modern movement. ; Any slight disappointment felt in the first Brahms selections of Mr. Sas- lawsky was amply overcome by. his power in the Russian selections of Moussorgsky. His voice found itself here, and the feeling and adequate exe- cution’ of the last three numbers of the first group secured the hearty sym- pathy of the audience. The last group, while losing some appreciation as the ‘ast: numbers in a long and‘ poorly arratiged program, were deli#htful in content and in execution. The: novelty of the horn was very pleasantly received. Although limited : CONTINUED ON THE FIFTH PAGE Two Sports Stressed In chapel on Wednésday Miss _ Josephine Petts talked on the impor- tance of fencing and lacrosse, two sports that are included on the list of new spring exercises. Fencing has always been taught as part of the required study in dramatic schools. It teaches agility, skill and |movement, and lightness, beside being __ the most efficacious method of keep- ing one’s weight where it should be. It is a particularly valuable sport for seniors who wish to make a good im- pression on their perspective employ- ers as they walk into their offices. Lacrosse is one of the best games we have here this spring. . Very few people in this country know how to teach it. It + originated with the American Indian and was taken up. by the-English- who-have always-played-it——— much better than we do.. There are. crosses which can be borrowed from the-gym;—and everyone is urged to give the game a trial, especially upper-. classmen, who in recent basketball games have not proven as lithe as the freshmen and sophomores. _ (Founded sin 1914) ¥ * Mawr College... PD so 3 - -Pwblithed (weekly durin the Colfége Year - jn the interest of By n Mawr College at the Maguire Building,. Wayne, Pa., and Bryn things - broadened -a shame that we w = = Editor-in-Chief Erna S. Rice, *30 ‘Copy Editor Catuerine Howe, "30 Editors . ‘-E. Baxter, ’30 Assistants oe M. Atmore, °32 Y. Cameron, ’32 Mailing Priee, $3.00 Begin . at Any Time the D. Asner, 331 M. E. FrotHincHam, ’f1 Subscription,» $2.50 Subscriptions May Entered as second-class matter at Wayne, Pa., Post Office. | INTELLECTUAL GADGETS There. is something about our. day | of rapid strides and amazing prog- ress that has caught each one of us: into the swing of things and de- veloped a kind of international pride in the twentieth century. . We look at the stars and shout, “Keep an eye on us! for the earthlings will get you if you don’t watch out!” We have symposiums of, all kinds of knowledge, and the man in the street is the intimate of the facts that were awful theory. to his grandfather. We all know a little, and we think we know a lot; what we don’t know is easily coun- terbalanced by the efficiency with which we keep track of all the new which came ‘within our range of knowledge: Only one man~has~so~-far~kept-a prying public from meddling with his own private thoughts, but the popularization of knowledge goes on. Albert Einstein, that incom- prehensible he, ds the dedicatee of a recent ‘issue of Judge. American humor is being elevated on the wings of relativity, and the ‘great “American public assimilates its in- tellectual nourishment in the pun- ning form.of spoon-fed knowledge. THE SPIRITUAL SIDE Fhe appearance of the faculty in the role of “guiders of the spiritual side~of youth” is one ~-which we greet with much due enthusiasm: We see a great deal of them as in- tellect developers, so why should they not prove to us that. the scholar, the professor, if you will, is also qualified to bring to flower the seed of religion sown in our lives by fond parents in the far-off period of childhood. The Sunday evening meetings of the Bryn Mawr League, We ‘sup- pose, are meant to- abe interesting as well as instructive. The under- graduate-point-of view has been so.|-~ _-many - tolerant ears that we feel we may times expounded to our , Suggest that the faculty be given a fair chance to express their views on the more serious things of life. The last service was a huge suc- cess and one. of the most interest- ing of the year. May we not be privileged to hear from more of the awe-inspiring -oraters who fill _ the rostrums of our week day hours concerning subjects about which we know they must - have “some ideas ;” these we would very much like to: hear expounded with aca- demic precision. BIGGER AND BETTER BUSES Last Saturday we planned a de- —ightfulHittle-excursion.to the Wis-|_ sahickon Valley, and having out- fitted ourselves suitably, we set our- selves to inquiring where we could take a bus and how long it would! take to reach our destination. ' “Bus?” was the answer. “Oh, you have to take a train to West Phila-' He ” The Theatre Adelphi: marized as “romtixn.< “Tove “i® high: so- ciety,” we still think: the play.is good. Walnut: Blanche Yurka in The Wild Duck; this is’ ai ery worthy. Shubert: The’ esert ..Song—good music that you@will recall when you hear it again. Forrest: 14 Night in Venice—a musi- cal comedy .opening here, and so to New York. Vv. Hosart 3] Vv. Survock 31 Lyric: The Whispering falieeye now Assistant Editors guess | J. Bunn, 731 D. Perxins, °32 Chestnut: Blossom | Time—another _ R. Hatriecp, °32 L. Sansorn, °32 | resurrection. ee Business Manager ‘ DorotHea Cross, ’30 . ‘ The Movies Subscription Manager Stanton: Doug Fairbanks talks and: does all his thrilling old tricks in, the cinemized version of Dumas’ Jron Mask. . Boyd: Broadway. Melody: behind the scenes on the Great.White Way. Stanley: The Dummy is a-very funny movie version of the stage. Mastbaum: Buddy Rogers shows that ihe has a voice in a bit of Close Har- mony. Palace : William Haines in The ‘Duke one Out, and it’s very good. . Karlton: Dick Barthlemess and Betty Compson in Weary River. { course you know the theme song. Fox-Locust: Thru Different Eyes: good cast in a new talkie. Aldine’: Noah’s Ark is another spec- tacle, and a rather harrowing one at that. % : Fox; Trent's Last Case, and George Jessel in person, in case you're inter- ested. * a The Orchestra “The last concerts given by Philadelphia Orchestra this. season will be on-Friday- afternoon, April 26, and Saturday evening, Aprif 27. They will be conducted by Mr. Stokowski, and the program will: be: one. of. re- ‘quested compositions: WagneresOverture, singer.” Beethoven—Symphony Né6- 5,4in C ‘minor. : Rimsky-Korsakow Suite, “Scheherazade.” “Die Meister- ‘Symphonic Selected Sub jective Spring Poems Read Miss Caréy aroused the lyric emo- ‘tions in us by reading « -pleasant group of spring poems in Chapel on Friday morning, April 19, Objective poetry about spring is difficult to find because the very’ idea of -green trees and flowers puts every one, especially poets, in a subjective frame of mind. There are, however, occasional purely descriptive songs scattered throughout literature. Miss Carey found that ie Old Eng- lish apparently had no spring, for all is bleak and bare in their poetry. But with “the retreat of the Ice Age,” or more -possibly with the influence com- ing from France the thirteenth- century England developed ‘the cus- -tom-—of--spring.— We-know- this; for +-Chaucer-tells us: ‘ “Than longen folk to go on os grimmages” (liberally interpreted as _ gota . But Italy introduced the subjective in the sixteenth century, and we have to skip to Shakespeare for the next real spring lyrics, such as “When daisies pied and_ violets blue,” and “Under the greenwood tree.” Dryden we have to omit from our list of lyricists, so we come to the later eighteenth century, with the Pre- Romanicists. and Blake’s ‘Laughing Song,” and we “Sing the sweet chorus of - ‘Ha, Ha, Hel'”’ Wordsworth is surprisingly untespon- sive on the. subject of spring poetry, spring do not belong, ‘strictly speak- ing, in our anthology. Edna St. Vin- cent Millay, the most characteristic, insists on giving us. “her personal re- actions ‘and forgets pure, objective de- scription.. There are a number of ,minor songs, however, that fit -our delphia and then changé and go out ' spring mood, and we are glad to sing again. Our It takes hours and hours.” spirits were Gal Swarthmore instead. - The answer was the same—more hours of train- | bus: connections. our. om: a petition te*the bus line might Yet it seems ; be of some avail, and we offer this, riding. Whereupon we gave excursion for the day. cad live*in Bop Mawr should be denied such _ ures on account of the very with Hersey his. “Little Shepherd considerably Song” about “the little bird” in us. ned, -so-we-decided-to-go- to “It occurred to us | Suggestion in ‘the hope that-all hei pleas. [ave been similarly - | disappoin — agree. Alice Brady comes to Phila- ; \‘delphiasas A Most Immoral Lady. Sum- the {Who is damnably forlorn, | Then, they ‘both. apply. but we find it in Swinburne’s “Ejest)?! Chorus. of Atlanta in Candee The observations of the moderns on + velopment. a ne th Pillar: of Salt “ Forty days sand forty oo, the Book of books *or the song of songs, ‘Anyway wé are beginning to get faith, and we won’t have to hynt for a river to be baptized. in either. Forty days and locts nights—ho—hum | —welly let’s turn over and go to sleep again. A dove canie and peeked in the window pane the other day when we were disconsolately surveying the watery waste—another old legend ,true, we exclaimed and leaped up. ‘But where was the olive branch? In came the dove: carrying in his beak a piece of chewing gum we had given up as lost weeks. before. With an apolo- ‘getic grace it dropped this remnant at our feet, wagged its tail -feathers sheepishly and slunk over to the radiator. Tears of-- disappointment welled to our eyes. This was. no heavenly messenger. Merely a poor earthly mite fleeing from the flood. We petted the bedraggled bird, and went out to,borrow a Bible and a Grimm’s Fairy Tales. * * Inspiration came to Cissy in Prince- ton and a little bird with.a beak for news made the long trip from there on Sunday. Cissy says: that she is very happy, but finds life very differ- jent. Evidently she pities us, Untrammeled lines wrenched From an-trammeled soul, - - ‘What is so rare as a. Monday morn- When you wish you'd born? a hi And the cow, °* : With the crumpled horn ° Is not the only one. - And the work piles up And -the spirits fall down ‘ (Cissy almost put the fatal word), God’s m the heaven, But, not.in the sun, if ever, come perfect days. _ “Oh.” Cissy, Cissy, where inimitable ‘sense of. humor?” Mrs. Lot, and trust this in our hands. library and we learn about. college from her.” sad is your While I lay gently napping, Wondrous summer plans a-mapping, Suddenly there came a-rapping, ‘As of elephants a-scrapping Outside the library door. I tried to -go on napping, But the chewing gum kept snapping, All my scattered thoughts entrapping. Can I never go on napping? Quoth .the echo, never more. oy * kk Her second impression cheering. There .is something good in the worst of us, or, shall we say, there is something -bad—oh, well, ~—Take~your choice. ‘oe * :: is “Happy Days and Dreary Nights” Once there was a little, girl wouldn’t say her prayers, She wert without her stockings and she put on, many airs; She always wore a sweat shirt and she “wouldn’t comb her hair, She smeared on orange lipstick and was ever on a tear. : ; ; -f ; Perhaps you. maybe’ wond'ring just how she got through. Well, it really was remarkable on the little that_she knew! Offer Modern Stage Works The Society for Contemporary Mu- ic, of which Mr. Alwyne is president, is giving a very interesting perform- ance of modern stage works on May 6 atthe Bellevue-Stratford—ballroom.... The ‘cast and orchestra. will be drawn from well-known singers and| the Philadelphia. Orchestra, - and - the; staging is in the hands of. James} Light, the stage director of the -Prov- incetown Players. The first performance of Schoen- berg’s “Pierrot Lunaire” marks rather ! an epoch in Philadelphia's ‘musical de-. The-other= productions are “Pupazetti,” a ballet by Alfred Casella, and. “Triple Sec,”. ‘an opera-fayce by Marc -Blitzstein. “Alexan allens will conduct the three , performances. Students may obtain. tickets from Mr. Alwyne at. the - special. Tate of never been} “To’clock defending quoth |’ more , who | ‘of the student body now and in the | “On Thursday evening, April 18, the maids of ‘the college displayed their tal- ents in a line quite different. from that with which we are so familiar. They presented An Old-Fashioned Mother at good performance it. was. The ‘acting was above that of the average amateur production, and_the playing of male parts made u@ hark back to the pre- Princeton era, and look to our dra- matic laurels. The scene, laidyin a New Jersey farmhouse, was extremely well designed and constructed. Great credit for the whole « ‘is due to “Miss Lillian Johnson, of Pembroke. East, who directed the play. The cast was as follows: _ . : ‘Deborah Underhill, a» Mother in eo eeeerers Miss Lillian Johnson Widder will Pindle, Leader of ‘the Cholf as Miss Fleta Blocker Miss Louizy Loving Custard, plain sewing and gossip, Miss Helene Henry Isabel Simpscott, the Village Belle, “Miss Annie I. Miller Gloriana- Perkins, as good as gold,’ Luckey Pindle, the widder’s mite,®* “Miss Beulah Hunt John Underhill, -the prodigal son, Miss Ella Louise Renolds Charley Underhill, the elder brother, “Miss Lilljan B. Longe Brother Jonah Quackenbush, a whited sepulchre, Miss Ella. Louise Renolits Jeremiah Gosling, a merry heart, ~ Miss Susie Taylor Enoch Rome, an outcast and a wan- derer Quintus Todd; the Country Sheriff, Miss Frances Matthews Swarthmore Debate Coming ‘There has been a slight .change in the debating team which will | Swarthmore-on- “Phursday evening at 8 the subject, “The House*is resolved that advertising. is detrimental te public welfare.” —The Bryn Mawr team, as it now stands, includes Elizabeth Linn, Mary Lam- bert and Janet Wise, who is replacing Adele Merrill. The debate will be -held--in.the—music..room_in.Goodhart, ~|and-will be followed by a reception in the Common -Room, : Lest you feel particularly inert and uninterested on Thursday evening, we wish to remind you very emphatically now that the first intercollegiate de- bate is. to be held on -that date. Of course, you have read notices to this effect on other pages of. this journal, ‘but we wish to make this intimate and serious appeal for an expression of your .support that night. You will surely be liberally rewarded for -any effort you may make; the speeches that. have been prepared to date are unusually amusing, as well as enlight- ening, ‘and. surely no one .can consider himself entirely disconnected © with advertising. The idea that the Debat- ing Club has been quiescent — this semester is falacious; its work -is show your approval of this fledgling institution. The Result of Work? Failures and D’s at Temple Univer- sity are the result of students major- tion, according to John, Barr, head of Industrial Service Bureau at that in- stitution, -Part-time employment nets the average student some $50 a month, monthly expenses in the university. Mr. Barr in his--report- ‘recommends that freshmen do no outside work dur- ing their freshman year. To this cause of failures and D’s might be added the horde of students majoring in extra- curricular activities, the several majoring in sheer laziness, and that small. few majoring in out. and out stupidity, ard you have all the failures and D’s of any university. Two-thirds body-does some sort of part- -time work to assist in financing its education. Approximately half the students going on probation were students doing out- side work. If ‘these figures were to; bear out the idea that working stu-! dents flunk more than others, two-, thirds of the flunkers would be work- | ing students. education bad enough to wash dishes and-scrub floors to get it is going to” make the most-of his studies. It would been -stolen from his owner be fine if all freshmen were able to; bought by one of the good citizens attend university Without working, but how many ‘of the worth-while members past would not-be here were they pre- vented from working during the first. year? A goodly number. President’ ame ; | feet—Daily Californian. - The student ‘who wants a deat the Second Baptist Church, and a very. Miss Alva ‘Robinson. Coe “ssi Miss Alice Map. face. merely. more crystallized, and we asked you:-all to-seize this ‘opportunity to. ing in work and minoring in educa- | ‘ . | Meth’s Bakery complete this well-planned whichis half of the average student's’ of the Stanford student | Page 2 : eves ae PRE COLLEGE R Ewe © Cie oe aa The College News | In Philadelphia 5 ; | “The Maids Present” ma : Mary Hulse* Elected elected by the committee to be the Bryn. Mawr representative at Junior Month this. year. This position entails first-hand social ~ work under organized workers . in New York. City. ‘ 2 We Repeat ~ Sho Spring .is once more upon us. Edi- torials, bare legs, poems in the “Lan- and other forms of éffusion all proclaim its advent. comes the picnic season. tern,” Every Satur- day and every Sunday from now on will and beauty-seekers strolling along\the main arteries leading’ from the campus. The call of the Library, of church, of Phila- delphia’s manifold. are ignored. We heartily approve of this week-end exodts towards rurality, and would do_all further it. : With this purpose in mind we our- selves have meandered about the couri- tryside hunting for likely picnic places, searching out mossy dells and glossy glades. that we might give practical in- formation to the ignotant enthusiast. Alas, we have not much to offer. The country has become sadly civilized in the last few years, and the .face of nature has acquired an urban~ veneer see its stream of nature-lovers be attractions in our. poor . power to. which is most displeasing. We advise all prospective picnickers to procure bicycles, for there ate few unsullied beauty spots left within amateur walk- ing distance. Millionaires’ estates di- vide the_land_with--Home—Beautiful-cot- tages,.and the claims of the proletariat the’ sewer at the foot. of Gulf road, al-_ though _eyén .that—has—béen ~ spoilt ~ by construction of a new road. ~The Old Mill beyond the Black Rock road isgan- other | sani favorite which ‘is. still feasible. find the untrammeéled coun- try, however, one mu&t go farther. Be- yond Gladwyne, almost to the Schuylkill, there are ‘picnicking places in profusion. | There are brooks without tin cans to wade in, and wooden bridges to swin® and shady nooks for slumbering.” We cannot give explicit directions for reach- ing this Paradise, as it never seems to. be in the same latitude two times run- ning. ‘Always one reaches it by chance, after much” wandering in ‘ikely- direc- tions. That is part of its charm; and perhaps there is no such place at= all. It ‘may be only a chimera, but we can recommend it anyway. “The other: region worthy of exploration lies in quité the opposite’ direction, out beyond Newtown Square. The farmer is still unharried by millionaires and suburbanites. - There leading over covered bridges. and past old Pennsylvania. Dutch farmhouses. There real cows chew their cuds in the fields, and real Buggies are occasionally | encounte As-f6r food, all have on own ideas. For Saturdays the’ Bookshop is ‘very competent. But for Sundays it might be-useful to know that Cook's Restau- rant is open,-and, on sufficient provoca- | tion, will supply sandwiches in all the | usual shades and_ varieties. Ginger ale by Powers and Reynolds, salted almonds and chocolate ditto, and apple pie by menu for the springtime Sabbath meal. *Frankness Refreshes’ After a deluge of college reports and questionnaires on the time-worn subjects of “necking,” “drinking” and “swearing,” in which students declare complete disapprobation of such evils, it is a relief to find that one group Of. students. at Columbia has no argu- ment with these so-called college vices. No matter how many statements are made to the contrary by deans, uni- versity presidents or students, the fact still remains that such thiggs do_exist.. not only in college circles, but in any | stratum of society.. They seem to be a part of any social order. It is refreshing to find that there is | Hoover among thent.—Stenford Daily | a college ‘group that has sufficient in- tellectual honesty to recognize that fact. Daily Califor nian. His Master’s Voice Holland (TP)—Just another case of his master’s voice. A dog that° had of Amsterdam, His master. 4 pro- fessor in one of the local schools, made an address over radio. The dog heard his. master’s voice and raised such @# }howl that the present owner investi- gated the situation and soon returned ‘the dog to ‘his original master.— | “Orange and White,” -Knoxville;-Tenn. Mary Hulse, 1930, has been |* And with spring * are ignored. Of course there is.always « excessive use of barbed wire,,‘and the. * legs from, virgin forest for gambolling, | one stil, finds a network of dirt roads” WES eos plements of: this terrace gave to the . gone on slowly, the. water gradually —now-completely uncovered. + ® q . be 1 HE*COLLEGE NEWS. w oPage- 8 i see Breasted Continued from Page ‘One pression and the Nile. Many secrets | were revealed. Water flows through the opening in*the divide to a lake whose surface is: forty feet below sea- level. -In ancient times, as the river "dwindled in size, the desiccation of the entire Sahara plateau must have sank in volume until it was confined to thevlake of the Fayum. ° The first thing accomplished by Sanford and Archell, was a complete and careful geological examination of the Nile’s course and the Fayum groove. They discovered, o@er the tertiary, lime- stones in the divide terraces, five hun- dred feet. above the Nile’s surface. These were of the. Pleistocene period, and the four terraces were all sterile, for man ‘had not yet descended into the Nile valley. Their:survey followed the ancient Nile bottom for - fifty miles; this Nile was west of the pres- ent river. and “carried the enormous volumes of rock from the Red Sea to its present deposit. _A whole range of Paleolithic implements was uncov- ered. The fact of finding the remains and the development illustrated. in them shows that the Nile bottom was thousands of years in forming. Archell discovered a twenty-five-foot terrace of the fourth Pleistocene and carried it round through the opening into the Fayum. The middle Mousterian im- depression a date, from which the geologists ld begin to find out that the. Fayum development was a con- tihuation of that in the Nile valley. The terraces found by Archell and Sanford go* down to the pew Stone Age; and the development of man-—in the Nile valley in the Tertiary, too, ‘is | Priceless Inscriptions ‘Found It is important to ob8érve that cov- ered up in the Nile valley soil are the traces of man’s eventual masonry’ or material resources—not the genetic development, but the development of an ethical consciousness.. To this end Egyptian coffins were studied: These are coffins in which the dead, through eyes in the opaque cedar of Lebanon structure, looks out and ‘greets -the early dawn; man dreaded the dark Continued on Page Four THE. BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. CAPITAL, $250,000.00 . ‘Does a General Banking Business Allows Interest on Deposits “Golflex”’ a ' Dresses | Golflex™ Dresses and Coats for ~The famous spring are here exclusively in Philadelphia. _ Silks, chiffon-weight wor- steds, novelty fabrics. 25,00 t0.62.50 A.*A: Announces Point Syst make known to the college. the point system for the ‘awarding of blazers as it now stands in a slightly revised form. Positions on teams courit as follows: ge _500 points—first varsity teams of sports, with two varsities. . 475 . points—subs on first . varsity teams of’ sports with two var- sities. ) points—first varsity. team of sports with one varsity; second varsity teams of sports with two varsities. : 425 * 400 teams of sports with one qear- sity; subs on second varsity teams of sports with two var- sities. 350. points—first-class teams. 325 points—subs on first-class teams, 275 points—second-class teams. 250 points—subs on _ second-class teams. 5 | and so on with a diminishing scale of fifty between each team and twenty- five less for subs. There is to be no rating within the team except as between the actual team member and sub. An individual may recéive points for each sport only once during the year. The points will be awarded for the highest position she makes. The point book is to be private, but anyone may learn her own score from-the Vice President of the Athletic Association. The blazers are awarded in the fol- lowing order: a 1000 points-Sclass_ blazer. 2000: points—class nsignia: 4000 points—college blazer. | 5000 points—college—insignia, without the sanction of the board. The Athletic Association’ wishes to} ‘points—subs on first varsity | ! Hymn—“Alleluia, No blazer or insignia is awarded} Organ-Choir in Musical Service The Sunday evening meeting of the mtsie room of Goodhart Hall on April 14. The ¢ #eewas"th the form of ‘a musicale, and’ was led by Edith Baxter, ’30. . ay The program was as follows: Hymn—“Christ the Lord Is Again.” Tune “Wirtemburg.” Organ— i : (a). Minuet (from Overture to “Sam- son” )—Handel. (b), Bouree (from orchestral Suite in C)—Bach.. Mr.* Willoughby. Hymn—“The “Radiant Morn Hath Passed Away.” Tune"“St. Gabriel.” Prayers | Choir— ny “O Lord Most. Holy”’—Arcadelt. -“God of All Nature”—Tschaikowsky. Organ— . : pieraes (a) Spring Song—Hollins. (b) Fantasia .on old melody, “Urbs Beata”—Willan. Hearts Heavenward Raise.” Eoi.” Stainer Sevenfold—Amen. Risen and - Voices Tune “Lux Floating University at Siam Upon their arrival in Bangkok the Floating University students were re- ceived by King Rama, of Siam, in the Throne Room. After the reception the king and his student guests at- tended a performance at the Royal Siamese Theatre: Later during their stay the students returned the king’s courtesy by presenting, their musical comedy,.-“‘Floating Around,” ~for his pleasure. The music and lyrics of this show are entirely the work of the men and women students. The students were allowed complete freedom during their stay and visited Bryn Mawr League was held “in- the The king, who} _|speaks- English, séemed-much pleased.|- all points of interest in ‘Bangkok and In parts of Bangkok canals: serve as streets and the students made a complete. tour of the ‘surrounding’ area. these. cig Silt The Royal Palace is situatéd near the Temple grounds wherein the fa- mous Emerald Buddha stands. ' It is | guarded by the sacred gates of Wat Phra Keo, which are almost never thréwn. open to foreigners. A feature of the students’ visit at the palace was the fact that the mid- year examinations were held there: The grandeur and strangeness of the surroundings did not distract the stu-|. dents in their efforts to make good grades, according to Dr. Edward A. Ross, Director of Education. At the conclusion of their nine days’ e Gifts “Ye : “of Distinaion Diamond and precious stone jewelry. Watches and clocks. Imported. and domestic novelties. China and glass- Fine stationery. ware. Class rings and pins. Trophies. bid A WIDE SELECTION FAIRLY PRICED J. E. CALDWELL & CO. CHESTNUT STREET AT JUNIPER ~ PHILADSLPHIA visit, King Rama again addressed the students in the -Throne Room. He complimented them on their industry* and'studious behavior and called them . splendid: ambassadors in thé, cause of * international good-will. | . rors 6 | Sean Eee Season 1929: June 26-July 28; THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL DOMESTIG ARCHITECTURE LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE A Professional School for College Graduates a The Academic Year for 1929-80.Opena ° Monday, October 7, 1929 HENRY ATHERTON F Rost, Director 53 Church St., Cambridge, Mass. at Harvard Square * 4 . Escondido The Pack Trip Camp for, Older Girls July,,24—August 20 oo College’ girls! Why not. spend four weeks of your vacation in the lorious mountains of New Mexico? An unusual opportunity for a small group to camp in the colorful Southwest. » Write for Particulars AGATHE DEMING 924 West End Avenue _ NEW YORK CITY OVELIEST English, screen.. comedy dancing and studios . SAVE 75 Bought singly, 5 copies at 35c each cost $1.75 .. . through this Special Offer you get them for $1... a saving of 75e. = it covers of the stars . . . American, Continental .-. . stage and . in photograph and drawing. ‘Reviews and forecasts . . . drama, musical turns, movies... opera and concert music . . . in Vanity Fair. Even if you don’t go often to the theatre, | you want to keep up . .. and when you do go, you want to know what to pick. Vanity Fair _is your best guide. » Besidesthe theatre... news of the galleries . brilliant bits of plays and sketches . . . serious essays by masters of —- RALPH BARTON . « SOS’ * CQREY: FORD. ares Ja ae ROCKWELk& KENT GEORGES 7AVE CONTRIBUTORS MASEREEL GEORGE JEAN NATHAN ; ; ; : CHEN DEEMS TAYLOR-- © CNP ‘ * cents with this Coupon \ MAX BEERBOHM home wonc How pathetic! Fair! New. York, London, Paris... bols of everything amusing, bizarre, hysteric! Moths by the thousand are drawn to them from afar, to be singed of their bank-rolls and When at last they stum have they really done? Seen half a dozen shows at $5 a ticket. Spent sev- eral dull dawns at_the: better-known and more stupid: night’ clubs. Lived too expensively at a middle-class ho- tel. Eaten 30 medivcre dinners. With luck, met a few -minor- éelebrities. Spent perhaps $2,500 for one month's incomplete entrée “into only one of the gay sopitels of the world. They go ering how they have missed How sym- , eace of mind. le “away, what so much of the advertised glamour. extravagant! ps Hew much better to spend $1 for | five months’ intimacy with everything a oe really amusing in_all three capitals... $y"? : “under the expert guidance of ‘Vanity - the theatre brilliantly English style . . . articles by modern thinkers _ . ©. Satirical and humourous sketches. | ‘Departments, too. . . golf, bridge, tennis, other sports... men’s fashions covered from London and. New York points of view ... . sensible stuff that a man can use. Allinall, a handsome and interesting maga- zine, often very funny, often very beautiful, well worth thirty-five cents in pleasure value. Try a copy of this month’s issue. Or, better still, pina dollar bill to the coupon below and send it in for our special short time offer at a 75csaving. EDOUARD BENITO GILBERT GABRIEL WALTER LIPPMANN DOROTHY PARKER- IAL TULLY Name dis rY ¢ HEYWOOD BROUN : PERCY "HAMMOND “BOBBY” JONES COMPTON MACKENZIE HENRY RALEIGH ALEXANDER, WOOLLCOTT Vanity Fair, Grtvear Burtoinc, New York Crry () Enclosed find $1. for which send me FIVE ISSUES of Vanity Fair beginning C0 Enclosed find $3.50 for ONE YEAR (12 issues) of Vanity Fair JOHN DOS PAS- FRANS EDOUARD STEI- = CY a -=—he-- recorded / ey SEs. aye at hanes ead i ow the chin of the —— Fe Shreiines . quet; _ place of the ‘ancients. & Page 4: 1 ¢ @. > ig THECOLLEGENEWS ee Breasted. Continued from Page Three > rid wanted to see the sunshine. Be- { dy was set out “veritable ban- the hereafter was thought of as a merely physical survival. But over the bieg were scores of human inscriptions. written four thousand years ago in.black ink, and. we find ' that we have grasped something more enduring—the concept “that conduct will be’ weighed and measured in the next world. There are hundreds’ of these inscriptions, and the process of _copying themghas been going on‘at Cairo .for six ,years. It was a long leap from the Paleo- - dithic man to the man with ethical no- tions and another to the man. of an- cient Egyptian culture. » There ‘are many temples which are known reser- voirs of historical records that have tto be saved. Their walls ate covered with actually readable inscriptions or paintings. _The old copies that have. been made are useless, compared with those now possible through advance- ments in science. The reading of the temples is vaJuable in an attempt to recall the stages of European history, especially. the critical age when the Greeks, as barbarian nomads, drove out the Cretans. who were enjoying a] wonderful civilization to the Nile. delta and to Palestine. .A temple at, Luxor, built: in 1200 by Rameses the Third reveals priceless records -of the south- ward press of the Cretans.. The wall- paintings represent the efforts of the Pharaohs to halt the invasiqn. “Eu- rope for the first time is emerging Yn the records “Of the world. There are innumerable inscriptions in Egypt, some works of art, and some merely inscriptions; but they all must — Until receytly the archeologist attacked the temple” wall . with a notebook and a poor cameta. We do it differently We have an organization which’ photdgraphs the temple walls; the photographs are then enlarged to the size of the~aver- age drawing-board. The second stage oi the copying process is in the hands of the draughtsman, who makes. lead- = Pencil notes on the enlargement, and then sets in his drawings with “ink: The photograph is placed in.a chemi- cal bath and all unsightly lines dis appéar. That seems to finish the work, but it is only the beginning. The single proof must be preserved, and the photograph is duplicated and con- verted into blueprints.- The blueprints are cut. up into ‘individual figures and now. pasted on pieces of paper, swhich allow room- for ‘notes. Next, the epigrapher is brought in for the cor- rection of the sheets; the corrections are: exceedingly. numerous,. and the whole Sheaf of..prints is sent.to the draughtsman who returns to the wall and compares the print, Twenty or twenty-five similar tests’ ‘are’ necessary before the final plate for publication is made. Egyptian Hall Preserved Turning from thé epigraphy to the arehitecture the south Side of this tem- ple is seen to be amongst the wreck- age of a royal dwelling; whose fret wall is at the same tine a wall of the “temple. Time palace was built of sun- dried. brick, but the “temple was of solid stone; this one wall is in a good state of preservation, and the super- structure of brick upon the stone ma- sonry enables us to reconstruct colon- nades, doors and the apartments of the king and queen, even to their baths and waterpipes. ‘We can observe the “exceptional penetration of the archi-. tect in the revolutionary. construction | ef vaulted roofs and clerestory. win- dows. As the excavatiori was con- ‘tinued it began to penetrate below the palace level; the archeologist, never satisfied, went through the floor: to discover another floor fifty metres lower, and “br ht out an entirely different and cathe palace which had been modified into > present palace. This building “has 1 traces of its structure and it is easy to restore; without any problems” we may have the restoration of an Egypt- ian hall. been -preserved in fragments, and the columns are now being erected and will be quite presentable. Hittite Remains Unearthed The ‘expedition headquarters pos- sesses a library, which is the first sci- entific library established in upper Egypt, before the archeologist. was _in- tellectually: marooned. Now, going ~ near Assyria, we shall visit the ‘site of the proverbial battle- It is situated in - Armageddon Africa, and commands the only really t very evident Sculptures and capitals have- the fertile crescent between Asia id. good pass between Egypt and Meso- potamia. It is a place to be 4nvesti- gated as a centre of influence. The mountain itself is-an-*impressive col- lection of rubbish—strata on. strata. The expédition house has a window toward Nazareth, and it is a strange coincidence that the early, youth® of the Prince of Peace, up there,on those} * hills, looked down upon the greatest battlefield. of the early ages. What happens: first at. Armageddon is_ that forMthe vdst quantity of usele$s. ex: cavated material, room must sbe made, in a dump which does! not cover any ancient remains. ‘The. local ‘peasants, the clumsiest kind of workmen, led in gangs by experienced Egyptian fore- |men, loosen the ,earth and carry it to a gart,. which is shot across the. LeXe cavations and is dumped beyond them. After the dirt is carted, away, investi- gation begins; the: draughtsman. fur- nishes the basis for publications; the != first-aid artist takes the stuff from the | collecting. baskets and *repairs all ob-|, jects that, would suffer from handling. ‘Bhe relics are then taken to the house | and the recorder takes charge of them}! but occasional pieces.are so interest- ing as to be examined before being entered into the record#* Among such finds was the stone of Shishak, an enormous gablet inscribed with. the Biblical story., Going up ta the moun-. tain you see the level of the original | site and the three levels below. First, there are Cretan buildings. Under- ‘neath. them are. relics of-the-monarchi- cal period of Hebrew history. And still further down are Hittite remains. The Hittites were a geet power and a civilizing influence “in 2000 B.C. They possessed cunéiform. writing and were also probably beginning hiero- glyphics. Many characteristics of the 7 pias the Hittites; to those familiar with Homeric song: it is startingly interest- ing to find that the new decipering has revealed many names related to} the Trojan cycle. As cuneiform was only deciphered since the World War, there are facts of fundamental impor- tance to be turned out. From the Aegean eastward will. be found Hit- the not yet understood monumental ‘hieroglyphics. City after city of early Hittite civilization has been found. Some of the cities. are go largely~ ins visible-as to be only betrayed by a piece of sculpture lying on the ground. At such sites two things are being done—preliminary explorations and preliminary soundings so as to mark down on the survey thé position of the site and its date. The third stage is to select ‘the -most important of such Even now, at the end ofthe -first sea- son- of. excavation, ‘much has been brought out, and we. have set up a Hit- tite museum for the Turkish Govern- |. ment.’ The beautiful painted..and un-]. painted pottery -unearthed is to” be catalogued in its proper sequence. Most of the work under way at present is the preliminary spade work before excavation is begun. , Monu- qments..canging from °early-- Eevntion down. to Roman, and later to Turk- ish times, have. been found in the heart of the Hittite country and can only be solved by years of research. All--the—expeditions converge on_ the University of Chicago as pieces of mo- saic, enabling us to put together the whole composition of- human history. American Tour to South Africa The National Student Federation of America, through the. International Con- federation of Students, is offering. a unique travel opportunity this summer to American students. This is a tour of three’ and a half months*« South Africa. American party will sail on the SS. Homeric July 2, and return or™he same boat, arriving in New York on October 16. They will travel ‘Tourist Third on the Atlantic passage and Second Class on the ‘boat to and from South Africa. The price of thé whole trip will be ap- proximately eight hundred dollars. The itinérary in South Africa will in- clude a stay of one week at Cape Town and visits to Stellenbosch and Welling- Pretoria and Johannesburg. A _ free period of two weeks is also included. Further particulars may be obtained from the: N. S$. F. A. avenue, New York City. Greek. civilization were inherited from | _ tite sculptures oftén accompanied by|* a group, and ‘excavate it thoroughly. |... The route will ‘be via Europe and ner ton, Port: Elizabeth, Grahamstown, Bloemfontein, Ladysmith, Drakensburg Mountains, Durban, Pietermaritzburg,| office at 218 Madison) be composed of both men and women. It i % pees ‘ 3 ; ‘will also ‘be: an -international one since |: the American group will be joined in England by a party from-the Interna- tidnal Confederation of Students. ° It is hoped that ajl the principal. European the tour. guhe members.of the tour will be,.en- j fertalied by members of the four uni- vérsities of South Africa, namely: the University of South Africa, the Univer- sity. of Stellenbosch,. the University of Witwatersrand: ade the University of Capetown. Representatives from these universities have ‘recéntly completed a very successful tour in this country under the auspices of the National Stu- dent Federation of America and the South Afrigan students are, therefore, very anxious to return some of the hos- pitality extended to them~by the Ameri- cans. a HENRY B. WALLACE » Caterer and Confectioner 22 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr Breakfast Served Daily Business Lunch, 60c—11 to 2.30 Dinner,. $1.00 = Phe re B. M. 758 Open dentavs countries will send represét tatives to join | he said, Dean Defines ‘Collégiate’ The term. ‘collegiate’ Dean Chris- tian Gauss, of Princeton, defined to- day a5°*bisiotions *padial immaturity, It is a characteristic, not confined to undergrad- uates, but quite attainable by college alumni. But “collegiateness” at Printeton, the dean continued, is on the wane, much as its ‘principal “symbol, the coonskin. coat, is disappearing. Students are a little shamefaced in coonskins ‘nowadays, ‘he said, and wear them.“for warmth and for lack of polo coats or Chesterfields.” —N. Y. Times. consciousness.’ FORDHAM LAW SCHOOL WOOLWORTH BUILDING NEW YORK CO-EDUCATIONAL Case Pystem—Three- Year Course Two Years of College Work Required | . : for Admission ° Morning, Afternoon and Evening Classes WRITE FOR CATALOGUE CHARLES P. DAVIS, Registrar ROOM 2851 [ CSRS SRR AT A BAe a — yuu WY) pots LS ~ ABABA ~ re. SHADE COMBINATIONS Blene [Poudre Compacte] with Light [Rouge] ‘Rachel with Light, Medium or ’ Dark Naturel with Bright, Light, Medium or Dark REFILLS— Both Rouge and Poudre Compact Obtainable Everywhere. 50 cents, SOLD 4 T THE BETTER ptt ne THE WORLD SS A pe en se Nal et FERN My A n 2 4 Ses C Y . DORABLY SMART.... in the chic new tone of polished platinum. The Coty Double Compacte, with its correct; individual shades of Cory Rouge and Pow- der together, assures — the constant. fresh- oadinen’ TEX ell wa —ine ness of your beauty —and so simple to refill that it lasts. as.en- duringly as a lovely DLE IIE DEO F as == DPE IE am watch. =r S| i LAZY 3D and outfit. __and geysers. hg and streams. or college next fall. return. trated booklet giving full information. JULIAN S. BRYAN ” Valley Ranch Eastern Headquarters ~70 East 45th Street, New York, N.Y. The party going to South Africa will Tue VaLLtey RANCH | e Trip in the Rockies Young Ladies (ANNUALLY SINCE 1922) A Summer in ‘the Rockies-on the back trails of Bt Wyoming, Yellowstone Park, and the Buffalo Bill fy” Country during July and August for Young Ladies. 2 Each member assigned her own horse, stock saddle Sleep in a tepee or out under the stars; see bears, moose, coyotes, antelope, deer and elk; camp in forests and in the sage-brush, by lakes, waterfalls, hot springs Over half the trip comprises lay-over periods from one to four days long with loafing, mountain ‘climbs, swimming, and trout’ fishing in Rocky Mountain lakes A vacation experience you will never forget. congenial group; excellent food, cooked by the’ best guides in-the West. Return in great shape for school . «| Private Pullmans and dining-cars from the East and References required. Party limited. Write for-illus- A sometimes complicated “by acute\ class | fs mo: ' Peter Pan Tea Room Lincoln Highway Wayn e ‘Hotel Highway a 2 and newly furtiished rooms for transients. fang plan dining: room. be rented for dances; roca! affairs. Grill dinners, WE MAKE LOVELINESS LOVELIER . Edythe’s Beauty Salon '’ EDYTHE E. RIGGINS Permanent Waving, Facial, Marcel Waving, Shampooing, Finger Waving,> Manicuring 109 Audubon Ave., Wayne, ‘Pa. : Phone, Wayne 862 William T. Melntyre. - Main Line Stores Victualer | ‘Candy, Ice Cream and. Fancy Pastry Hothouse. Fruits Fancy Groceries 821 LANCASTER AVENUE . Bryn Mawr WILLIAM: L. HAYDEN BUILDERS and HOUSEKEEPERS Hardware 838 Lancaster Avenue —, BRYN MAWR, PA. 2 knows she ‘can call the home folks . ae without cutting into q , : her allowance .. ; she 1S frequently seen at the Sides! Charges on calls by number ma now be ce addi- reversed wit tional cost. Arrange ae the folky at home to telephone them this week-end, ‘ ‘ o Z ‘ e e meg: . IIL , Trio. for ‘Piano, Violin and Continued from Page Qne , Horn,-: Ops 40....cccscsiitweitsiue BPAHAMS “many 7 so aaties have, bcTaAtonsp = eae 7 seato™ acide ‘i @luded, and ‘have brought to the| people -in each nation the. realization war. ‘Now we have found common intel- lectual ‘values between all countries. The rank-and-file, particularly the ex- _service men, see that war must. not recur, and are studying the problem in a sober, critical’ manner, giving their support to everything, done ‘to reconstruct Europe... In * annual’ conference of ex-service men pledges its support to: the govern- mental policies. Moreover, busi- ness men realize that more is to be made from peace than war. In war, part of the world ‘market is ruined and “prospective Scustomers are -de- prived of their buying power ‘Though | international bankers and business men see this truism most. clearly, more lo- cal interests are béginning ‘to” feel” it | also, and to conduct business on the basis of the economic unity of the world. & Need for Ificteased Diplomacy All these pledges and treaties, this machinery of organization, create new conditiéns and also manners. in for- eign affairs. In the League, since council déliberations are open to newspapermen and the public, diplo- mats have one dominant preoccupa- tion, to put the case of their country in a favorable light in the opinion of fhe’ world. They see that no country can afford to be uncompromising, since such an attitude gives ‘rise to suspicion and hostility, and even the most “undemocratic diplomat tries to impress_the world with his country’s | peacefulriess. : Today patriotism and nationalism are as, important, as. ever, but. the ‘methods ‘of serving one’s country are being revised.. “Jingoism” -has given way to, somnething more constructive -and intelligent. Every statesman knows that some things are forbidden his. country, ‘and that he may best serve___it- by. compromising. The change of viewpoint is illustrated’ by the lawsuit between France and Tur- key over an.imprisoned ~Frenchman. The Court fuled in favor of Turkey; France accepted the decision, and pub- lic, opinion supported it. sible attitude would have’ been im- possible fifteen years ago, when na- tions were like bandits, and there was no legal guilt-in declaring war. At the present time our. hope for the abolition of war lies in the “support ofthe masses and in the hope that, should fear and nervousness cause two peoples to become involved, the other nations will remain cool-headed. : It is now recognized that America’s part in setting up international, rela- tions was pre-eminent when Europe was mixed up. with individual prob- lems. -The American delegations have - been criticized for their idealism and lack of sense of political realities, yet it is on ‘the. foundations which they laid that we are working ‘now::'Every- where. in- Europe: the. American dele+ gation was regarded as almost an ‘au- thority, and in many cases cast the deciding vote because of its impar- tial view: The European ‘peoples have realized the American will to give the world something to use for peace and are mere dnd more grateful. CONCERT ENDS SERIES Continued from Page One to selections of a definite and re- stricted nature, the-instrument has a sweet,.semi-serious tonal quality which | - assures enjoyment. The small size-of the audiente and the dwindling of interest in the pro-: gram, as*it. meandered to an inconse- quential close, were calculated to ledve a negative impression of the concert as a whole. The Concerto of Bach and the Brahms trio, however, rise . from the mass of obscuring detail ‘in simple, impressive dignity. The pro- gram was: . I. Violin—Concerto in A Minor, eS =< JS. Bach Allegro non tanto : Andante Allegro assai I we ‘Songs—Ernste .Gesange Brahms Wenn ich mit Menschen | y O, wiisst’ ich doch den. Weg zurtick Botschaft The Tempest Sun sine Moussorgsky After the Battle... Moussorgsky | : ———¥ that there is a will for peace j er nations, though before they/ thoug a that’ every, nation was preparing for France an Such a sen-|_ Adagio. Mesto Allegro con brio | IV.- Violin—Romance 6 J lowerlife | Lotus Land .:.Cyril Scott-Kreisler “Scherzo (from Concerto), Prokofieft Saint-Saens V. Horn—Romance Ricordangac-000- Tag deeissigery VI. Songs—E@ute la Symphonie, Dubois | Tout gai (Greek Folk-Song), Arranged by Ravel Auprés de ma hlonde, » «French Folk-Song The .Child’s Prayer... Moussorgsky. Two Russian Folk-Songs Hampton Institute Visited | The movement for intercollegiate good-will received a’ new impetus and a new interpretation during the past week-end; for the first -time in the history of Hampton Institute a group of students from four of the white col- leges of Virginia spent. two days as guests on the beautiful campus belo Newport News. : After a leisurely drive on a lovely spring afternoon, the party in Mr. Brown's car was welcomed i Hamp- ton Institute by Mr. George Ketcham and Mr. Robert Ogden Purves, field agents for the colored college. The evening meal Saturday is a delightful memory of good food and of fine fel- Jowship, as, indeed, are all the meals at the Holly Tree Inn. The party felt honored that:.they were allowed to stay at the official guest-house of the Institute. In the evening, the five visitots were. delighted’: with “Children of ‘thé Moon,” a tragedy by Martin Flavin, which was presented by the: Hampfton.._Players,—in--Ogden- Halt: About' fifteen hundred of .the colored students were present in the large au- torium that seats twenty-four hun- dred. This dignified brick structure, équipped with a wonderful organ, is one of the few buildings on the cam- pus that’ was not. built by student labor. Sunday morning. the. guests were shown: ‘through the Trades School Building of useful arts for men and boys, the Honte-Economics Building for the women and girls, the Biology and the Chemistry Laboratories—all these. are fitted with the latest and best equipment, much of’ which has been designed and -made on_ the grounds of the Institute. Since a modified form: of compulsory military training is required for the men, about twenty-five visitors, including .the party from Richmond and Williams- burg, watched the inspection and re- WHITEHALL. LANCASTER PIKE, (On THe Lincorn HicHway) - ‘services in the morning. No .musical instrument may be used in the church, according to .the donor’s will; conse- quently, there has beep 2 Femarkable development or tne~nattve musical _tal- ent of the negro students. The chap- lain, Rev. Lawrence Fenninger, was ‘very kind during the brief but strenu- ous visit. In the afternoon three con- ferences, one with Coach H. C. Wil- liamg,,,a %.+Y modest man who-has led the movement in athletics. aniong the negro colleges of the South for strict rules and fair play, one with the Y. M. C.. A: cabinet, and another with the “Y” at its regular meeting made the visitors and their hosts real- ize that college problems are not con- fined to any. one race. Their dissatis- faction with compulsory chapel, their social problems growing out. of educa- tion, their spirit of ‘religious unrest— all these problems sound very familiar to the visitors. The chapel service at 7.30 P. M. was led by President Gregg. The singing of thé negro spirituals by the entire student body was an un- forgetable experience fit to cap a trip that may have much influence on thé ‘relation,of white and colored colleges of the South. As the party drove back to Rich- mond Sunday night, the members felt that they*had come into a new under- standing of the similarity of the prob- lems of the colored and white stu- dents, an appreciation of their ability to achieve some worth-while ends’ if properly trained, and a feeling that the Institute can Universities are moyarchial, while “Iinglish Ones are aristocratic. That is tc say, Universities on this contjnent are governed by presidents im ‘an dasebracic 1ashion, and those presidents are respon- sible only. to a small body of lay trus- tees: On the other hand, Engtish Uni- versities-are governed by.a large bedy of elected or co-opted fellows. The professor had other things to say about American Universities. He round- ly condemned them because of the thesis system, the acuté specialization, andthe dremendous enrollment which, he said, led te unsatisfactory instruczion. None the less, there were. certain~admirable points that the speaker touched upon. One was the efficiency and impartiality of Ameri- can historians, and another the very fine —Toronto Varsity. Why « College Education? the realization of the neartiess of grad- vation and repetition of the annual re- frain, “Why a College Education?” Is it *prethat four years in ‘college -can ever make up for the years of practi- cal experience in business that have been foregone by the college student? -Faced by the handicap _ of inexperi- ence, iS the college graduate not atsa disadvantage in the battle, of earning a livelihood? college to offer? William» De Witt Hyde has very capably outlined the offer of the col- | “To be at home. in all lands-and lege: “Spent August i in Munich ~Hear-the - - Wagner-Mozart Festival : and get your GERMAN fof the. ORAL The th tae v. on eee will help American girls find comfortable “accommodations in‘ pension or in private families. s Delightful surroundings within easy reach of moun- tains. . u For patticulars {j] B..BALCH C, FITZGERALD rt] Merion Denbigh John J. McDevitt Phone, Bryn Mawr 675 Programs Bill Heads Tickets Letter Heads Booklets, ete. ® e Printing Announcementt : 1145..Lancaster eis -Rosemont,.. Pa ILUNCHEON, TEA. DINNERF Open Sundays ri CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE [ Felephone: tn Baws 1185 W U b U U ( College Inn and Tea Room J Caters \ especially for you,. 1 to . 7.30 week days and Sundays, 4 to 7 saturday Open at i2 for Early Luncheon SR 5: Re +} fey Fox's Glacier Mints We import them from ~ Shar cee England se 50 Cents a Jar at all Ghee ome ie am a. has Pin 6. vias: Company ! 1616 + PURAESDS ST., PHILA. Musto—Dancing for girls only i Tad = libraries with splendid research facilities. | With the advent of spring comes. What, therefore, has: the | ; Oe eee eer he occ een eee eee cee ee task you" undertaké; ‘friends amgng the men of your own age, wig are the leaders in all walks | of life; to lose yourself in generous enthusiasms and co-operate’ with others for common ends; to learn ; manners from students who are gen- tlemen, and form character under pro~ fessors, who are Christians;—this is the offer of the ‘college for the best four years of .your life’ a) ‘a con- temporaneous- work. “To Know Thyself,” to know one’s in- dividual capabilities and faults, and not to judge the one too highly, nor pass over the other too lightly, is a solid foundation upon which each individual smay start to build his future. To have gained the standard for the appreciation of ‘other men’s works and the criticism of your own, is a step farther along the road to success, and a puissant arma- ment in the struggle for success, for the man who neither. underestimates the strength of his opponent, nor’ oyeresti- mates his own strength, is adequately footing.—The Tomahawk, . Holy Cross College. For Craft Workers Sold by the Whole or-Half Skin and cut to measure. Also Tools: and Accessories. Write for Samples EAGLE ART COMPANY Street . Medford, Mass. 42 Ames , Books Books Art -French Fiction Books General Poetry Travel EUROPE? |. ae Europe. tinctive chauffeur-gui chateaux count hill towns of in the itinerary. eS A 51 Fri Aue to make hosts of } equipped to’ meet any adversary on even |. ARE YOU IN TROUBLE? @ If so, may I secure desirable steamship accommmodations for you on any line you prefer? . . . Tourist third class. . . . I can also make your. hotel reservations im @ EUROPE by MOTOR . . . service. . . . itinerary to meet your own preference. * Fine -ears:—. . . ; the lake country of England. is oe aly. q@ INDEPENDENT ITINERARIES by. rail are offered in all European countrigs, - with the “services. of couriers and guides included in the rate. __ My personally conducted tour sails from New York on the S. S. “France,” June 13. First-class accommodations. . . . Travel by private limousine in Europe. France,. Italy, Switzerland, Ger- _many, ‘Belgium and England are included gone MARK HAIGHT \ 2) ae ) Se ) oe) ee) ee) Se ) eee) ee) ee) se) ee) ee) ee) ee _ « og . ‘ » a cian hoe a 6. ma ne * i a : , e a bi by . e y. Pe e “THE COLLEGE SMES f: : quemrenis: at id - are — = = N | df Spain arg free to all. “Consequently, Calendar ages; to count naturé -a familiar ac- SGHOOL :OF HORTICULTURE - ithe Sole source of income .:‘is the State, |. Thursday, April 25: Behate. with quaintance and art ‘an intimate friend; FOR WOMEN a ; : SSaeRTEN : : ~ Ge Fl lture, D ; Whose. grants, although now. increas Swarthniore, in the “Music Room, to gain a standard for the appreciation ee. renin ’ ie, andicne en But déspite these pessimistic ing, fall short of actual needs. Goodhue, of other men’s work.and the criticism] Year "Diploma Course begins September | Salamanca,’ being” the richest,~ lost We dnead M “Litel M of your Own; to. carry the keys of the eo Feparent bositions open : to gradu. eanesda ; ay. 1 e a a i. immer ourse, ugus most; but the same tale can be gatal.. ¥: 4 4 ¥| world's: dibtary™ ai... ¥ Gdkeetvand feel) “15°29,” Address a ~~ day,” and announcement’ of under-| its resources behind you in whatever -Mrs. James Bush-Brown, Director Box AA, Ambler, Pa. a JEANNETT’S- BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP -° . -@ Cut Flowers:and Plants Fresh ‘Daily Corsage and Floral Baskets Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty Potted Plants Personal Supervision. on All, Orders } Phone: Bryn Mawr 570 823 Lancaster Avenue : CO 0 8 es see sem ee em =e $, JOHN KENDRICK BANGS: > DRESSES 566 Momtconser : ‘AVENUE BRYN: MAWR, PA. 8 A Pleasant Walk from the Col- lege, with an Object in View SPORT SHOP 62 East Lancaster Ave. Afternoon, Evenne ude Sport deve d = » First class. » . . Cabin a dis- An | individual Competent . Trips through The The ~of France. *> >. sa (ere (ee (es Ce (cases (ee (ome (oem (cr eres (ce GS) SS) Sa) Se) me) ee en) ee) ee) ee) ne mee) mes) nee) we) meee) we) we) ae) es) wee) as) ees) eee) ee) ee) ee) me) ee) “New York ) me) ee) sees) saree) ee) me) see