“VOL. XV, NO. 22 oe 4 #% ollege a SS — BRYN MAWR (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, PRICE, 10 CENTS eaten - Little May Day Duly Observed Drizzling Rain iin Thedatens. to Mire Enthusiastic Hoopers. HALO QUEEN FLORALLY Little May Day: was held on May| 1, according to tradition, and all the time-honored. ceremonies. were duti- fully observed. The Seniors, awak- ened at 6 o'clock by the Sophomores, proceeded .to give a.May. basket to Miss Park and one to Mrs. Manning; and at 7 o'clock the sun obligingly emerged® in response tothe Latin hymn sung from Rockefeller Tower, as .it is sung--from the Magdelene Tower in Oxford. -Miss Woodward, was crowned Queen of the May on the stairs with the customary salute and amid enthusiastic cheers from the college in the hall below. Somewhat. revived by strawberries, chipped beef and the band, the col- lege danced about the ‘Maypoles on the green. Mrs. sented Miss Woodward with a neck- lace. Miss. Woodward responded with an unusually entertaining spéech, in “which she thanked ‘Mrs. Manning for ‘taking the time from her thesis _.to’ attend May Day, and declared ‘that she thought May Queens were born, | not ‘nade, and that she advised the _: college to gaze steadily at the neck- Jace. She also remarked that she was -_ glad. to see that the college was re- taining its old traditions, especially the weather and the food, but that she had wondered whether or not we were going to import Princeton for May Day, and make Crichton King of. the May! Pagan Natures Capable of Intellect Aiter some exceedingly spontaneous and FOREIGN POLICY Our: somewliat dismaying’ policy ~ of complete isolation, so, long criti- cized and discussed by the more —broadminded-_and-farseeing-of-Am- erican patriots, is showing signs of a slow but very sure death. It is more than noteworthy that, during the-past few weeks, three items of international importance have chief- ly concerned American public men. First of these was Mr. Hughes sailing to take his seat at the World Court. Second was the announce- ment of Mr. Hugh Gibson, in Gen- eva, of America’s willingness to enter into a really substantial plan for naval disarmament. Last, and possibly most important, is the plan, of Mr. Owen Young to cut down . the war reparations demands so that they will be more within the limits of what Germany claims she is able | to pay. Each of these pieces of news marks a rather notable step in the progress of our attainment of an international point of view=-We'- watch with interest, and o~’, hope | will | _| submit credentials showing they are that such cheering pros, « lead to as worthy achievements. i WILLOW-WILLOW-WAILY Sentimentality is pleasant when distilled to the gentle and mocking liqueur which Gilbert’ and Sullivan offer us. Our today, when it is sen- timental over itself, turns pink and white. and gushes out in the movies --with--touching closeups and dim, ; tragic fadeouts; we must ‘never: laugh—it would be a breach of, ba meat effects. the nice Stone musical ‘comedies, with Will Rogers pinch-hitting manfully, and walk- ing away with the show. - Lyric: Zoe ‘Aikins’ German play, South of Siam. . Walnut: Chinese O’Neill—more melo- drama. Bs Garrick: Still, The Houseboat on the Sty. Coming . Garrick: Gambling; opens May 13. oe The Movies Stanley: Society is mixed up in Chinatown Nights, and situations, diff- cult-even for the movie directors, result. Stanton: Doug Fairbanks finishes the life of D’Artagnan with a very worthy gesture ‘in he Iron. Mask. Karlton: ‘ John Gilbert in ‘Desert Nights. Aldine: Noah's Ark. : . Fox: See and -hear New. York in Speakeasy. Boyd: The Desert “Song: This - is the first musical play ever to be entirely done over in movie form—the music is very good, Mastbaum: Dolores Costello, as The Glad Rag Doll, really loves the younger son of a wealthy family—and then the old, old story! - Fox-Locust: Thru Different Eyes is a story of the Great American Court Room. . Little: A German film, The Trial of Donald Westhof. This is supposed to be the last (we Wonder!) word on the younger generation—done with the best ilm Cinema Guild: The Passion of Joan of Arc; the whole picture deals only with Joan’s trial, imprisonment: and death; there is little action, but the film itself is-a miracle of character portrayal. 4 : For Students of Art _ ar limited number of scholarships have been offered by the Carnegie En- dowment for International Peace, for American men and. women for study in the Institute of Art and -Archaeol- ogy of the University of Paris, during the ~-1929summer~~session. scholarship will carry a_ stipend of $400, which wil] cover traveling, living, and tuition expenses for the seven weeks of the summer -session. The courses at the Institute are de- signed primarily to meet..the needs of »|the following persons: (a) University and college students who expect to specialize in art with ’a view to becoming. teach- ers of art, curators of museums, architects, art workers and writers; Teachers of art and curators of museums who ‘would like. the opportunity .of taking, advanced instruction, acquiring new points of view and studying directly the art treasures of Paris and France; Students or teachers of French (b) (c) or of history particularly inter- ested in art. Candidates for the scholarships must qualified to pursue these courses to advantage. College . students. must have completed at least three years’ work in college and present a recom- mengation from their professor. The session opens on the first Mon- ‘day in July. Classes in every subject will be held. every day for six weeks, ; except on Saturday. Each class meets for -one hour daily. Specially con- ducted visits to places and monuments something, and writhing is the only; will be arranged on Saturdays and relief allowed and that mental because orchestra chairs are rather cramped. Apparently, soul- ful popular songs do touch “respon- sive chords” in our weak natures; still sometimes certain . mooning voices, grate on us with their partial __nasaljty, but we cannot laugh. Our _ one joy is that~we~have~definitely- escaped from the art of the by-gone century, but it is uncertain how for- tunate we are to be immersed in cubism and not be able even to smile. Prose and poetry are doing something véry serious—we are not quite sure what ; it may be ludicrous | * but, fashionably considered, it is not fall back ‘on Gilbert’ and Sullivan and learn to laugh at our own senti- mentality. Dr. D. H. Tennent, of Bryn Mawr, is among fourteen men who were elected i = the National Academy of Sciences at - the closing session of its annual meeting in, hele D. ‘Ee Wetneey: must be’ better... +} mittee of the American School Sundays. The. seventh week will be taken up by the final examination. A small fund is provided for short trips approved by the faculty of the Institute ,and the Director of the American University Union in Paris. Further information about these opportunities and about the courses -offered- at-the.summer. session may be obtained from Institute of © Interna- tional Education, 2 West Forty- aft Street, New York, = - Dons Another F eather Dr. Mary Hamilton. Swindler, Associate Professor of Latin and Classical Archeology, has “recently ~beer=asked=to become adaptation of a meee ,* campus celebrities, Each ‘| tive of all phases dia Saoins ¢ 8 of f Salt” “ Cissy Centipede, along with the other week-end. She was. treriendously ‘inter- ested in the back “scenes of Patience. Cissy argues that it is much wiser to stay behind the sgenes. because in addi- tion. to seeing the perforfnance free of charge; you can even snatch up choice bits of gossip, and smoke an. occasional cigarette. into the Undergrad ‘room. The room was thick with’ smoke. _ So. Cissy tripped Avdragoon lay sprawled on the couch; two figures lolled against the radiator, their coats “open, helmets. off. Several card games \were in session; in one corner. a venturesome love-sick rfaiden was talking with: a tall blonde soldier, “Well,” says Cissy, dinbeliin at the maiden, “this is “certainly no\ place for a lady.” “Exactly ‘so,” shouted. the regiment in chorus, *“the same thing occurred to us, too, when you first stuck your nose in the room.’ urday afternoon as we skipped merrily along through Pem arch, what was our surprise, to catch a glimpse of a line of blue against the sunset sky. The line approached us, stogtl at ease. We advanced cautiously, there is something about a uniform. -‘But,. alas! our high ‘Hopes’ were blighted. IT was not a regiment of French blue Devils, nor a group of mid- shipmen, nor even a few stray kaydets. Not at all, would you: believe it. (of |course you will, because you. probably | encountered them during the day)? It Was merely a cluster of little girls in tams and blue dresses, poor little girls, who had no place to lay their weary hands. But the dean came to their aid and posted a sign: Does anyone have room -for--some—Rese--Maries? a bed; my fortune for .a bed. * Will pay exorbitant rates (swallow: hard), any- thing up to three dollars. General draw was this week and we tried to feign indifference; but don’t ever think that we missed one detgil. As we felt a little shy about parking in Low Buildings, we chose the infirmary as the next place for news. It seems that _Pembroke and Denbigh suffered from popularity; while Merion’ waS most beautifully snubbed (whether on -account of its own exclusiveness or the exclu- siveness of the drawers, we are not: pre- pared to say). Mrs. Lot is as usual cofhplaining. It’s hay, fever this time. So pute spends her time on the hill, sulking’ 4 Bare backs ae itching toes Sun: burn oil Peeling nose. Where the bee. stings there sting I, On this garlic I must lie Where. the gnats with, noisy pace Ciggles ‘round my heated face. Oh, di—e, I’m going to sneeze again. American Sculpture Exhibit There is an extraordinarily inter- esting exhibition of American_ sculp- ture in San Francisco this summer. Under: the supervision ‘of the Na- tional Sculpture Society of New York, and owing to the generous gift of Mr. Archer M. Huntington, the California Palace of the Legion of Honor houses some thirteen hundred exhibits, the. work of three hundred American: sculptors. The collection as a whole “will give a -bird’s-eye view of the accomplishments. in this field, and emphasize the importance ‘of the art of sculpture and-—its -influ- |} ence on American civilization. “The exhibits range from coins and medals to. small gardens, _ interior pieces, . portraits, monumental and civic architectural_work. It is indica- “of American sculp- sure. from the classic to the ultra-mod- ern.’ |. The_ offici official opening. of the exhibit} a member of. the Manaying its in Athens. This committee | meets to discuss and to decide upon the policies to be followed in the school. Dr. Swindler’s appdintment is an honor to~her-- | self and to the college. was on April 27, ‘and it will: remain open September 30. The book published in connection with this exhibition, and descriptive of the pieces to be dis- | played, is in the New Book” Room. It is very, interesting and is illus- ; | trated with photographs of the best- ppv work, of Aemeregas: = ie paid us a ‘visit last}. \ ulty And still more of the unifornSat- | it reached Taylor. and. A~bed,|. throughout the summér—intil tin.) College as dents and the college authorities. There will be a manager to attend to The the Graduate School -will occupy an apartment, to be arranged on. the ground floor of the southwest the material side of the hall. -Dean of wing. Radnor has always been fortunate in its drawing-room and large en- trance hall:on the main floor, its stu- ‘sitting-room ‘and large. central These should furnish a comfortable and attractive dents’ hall on the second floor. setting for the sogial life of the resi- dent graduate students and give to the non-resident graduate students a place to come to during any hours they may wish to spend on the'campus out- side of the library or laboratory. In their Denbigh clubroom, the graduate students have always dis- pensed hospitality at tea time to fac- and ‘ undergraduates. In . the larger quarters of Radnor- the Col- lege will be able to entertain both with and. for the graduate students and is fortunate in having a group of neigh- bors who, with great generosity, have established a fund for this purpose. Some of\the distinguished scholars who come \to fhe College to lecture. can be brought, in the future, under the auspices of the Graduate School, and the Graduate Hall may be used for the small reception,,or more hap- pily sti, the intimate discussion that -sometimes-follows~a-lecture.—The-hall teas of the other halls) at which class groups.act in.turn as hostesses with the warden, might well. ih Radnor be converted into teas at which depart- ments or groups of departments would like to entertain their faculty ‘and the advanced undergraduates in’ \ their fields. It is thought, too, that\ the | graduate students, with a dining-room and reception-rooms all their own, will feel more _ like entertaining their friends, and the Dean of the Gradu- at@School will arrange, from time to | time, to entertain in the hall dining- room, people both from within and without the college whom the students will enjoy meeting informally. Any such. plans, however, are per- functory beside the as yet intangible reality “that will be the life which the graduate students will work out for themselves. The undergraduates of the country have pretty satisfactory established a life that suits them. Graduate students have only -in_ the rarest instances, as in the Graduate College at..Princeton, been given a -|.chance. to. carry. out any thought they might have for their community exist- ence. The opening of Radnor as a graduate hall gives to a_ group of | highly-picked young women scholars | an. opportunity for self;determination. | The establishment of traditions of liv- ing within Radnor jtself will be the | pioneer job of the graduate students of 1929-1930. . It will be the task of every one in the College to help them establish the best possible conditions: of intercourse between Radnor and the rest of the College. The interest and ‘significance of the graduate group are very striking to any one who watches it being collected year. by year from all corners of this country and from the ends of the earth. The process of awarding resident fel- next year left us not only with the usual waiting list on which to draw, in. case any of the successful candidates re- | signed, but with a waiting-list topped ‘byfourteen names. that‘ until the last moment were being considered by: their respective departments as runners-up In all cases these the not only -thave . -wel- comed to .their seminaries, but whom they would have liked to honor with Such |applicants are, of course, given first choice of rooms, after the fellows and}whohaving-.shown_ their. ability scholars, incase they can afford to ik lowships and. scholarships for for the awards. fourteen were Faculty ‘would students whom a fellowship or a scholarship. come to Bryn Mawr without financial help, but the graduate student is only too often apt to 'be faced with the necessity of giving up studying tem- porarily, if ‘a scholarship is not- avail- lable. ‘Graduate School » for a list of , this It'is-a-most-healthy sign in the (Phe*fottowing- paragraphs -are-quoted from an article-written by Miss Schenck for the May issue of the Alumnde Bulle- The New Radnor will accommodate sixty graduate students, of whom one. will be named by the President of the “Senior Resident” and will act as liaison officer, between the stu- ATHLETICS Contirfued fronf’ the’ First, Page faction.. We held a couneil, meeting,. which included representatives ad- mittedly not intensely ‘athletic, and we overthrew -the old_despotism of four required periods of exercise a’ week to be signed for. The new Physi- cal.. Education Department’ conspired with‘us. The whole exercise system was put on an “on your honor’ basis, each student reporting with her team at regular hours. ? _. With the winter term the whole ‘pro- gram had to change. Our liberal coun- cil met again and we turned our .radi- cal program into a more gpnServative one. Every: student was advised to | take three periods of exercise a week.. Every Freshman had to report at Body Mechanics and one ‘ether . two- period class, and every Sophomore was required-’ to attend Hygiene classes and .two other periods of classes or sports, Juniors and Sen-— iors, it was assumed, would recognize the value of exercise to body and mind, and act accordingly. Any class and any sport was open to them. . This system’ proved more satisfac- tory and was resumed with minor sea- sonal changes during thé spring sés- sion, The introduction of body mechanics,. - natural dancing and clogging, the in- creased interest in tennis and fericing, the changing styles in academic and athletic clothes, besides the inefficiency ‘of the old system, made it advisable to change the Blazer point system slightly. - A report of this committee has* appeared in the News and “will be ‘submitted for your criticism. For similar reasons the Constitution of the Association, revised in 1926, has. once more been’ changed to meet our new needs. The supervision of the grounds has _ been delegated to the Gymnasium Department rather than the .Treasurer.. in order. to keep in ‘Daley’ =touch with Mr. Foley, ..the business office, and the sports man- agers, This year we have been feeling around. for the perfect solution to our required-athletics problem. If we were all eager athletes there would be no problem. It is those persons who hate hockey, who are more fond of the smoking-room than the swimming pool, of tea than basketball, who make the\trouble.’ It is those persons whom we have sought to interest in what we consider to be. their own welfare. To make exercise more aesthetic, more individual, and more attractive to the “intellectual,” and, above all, elastic enough to go at least half-way . on any undergraduate proposition, has. ° been the constant aim of Miss Petts, Miss Brady and\ Miss Seeley. The ‘colleg# administration has been very sympathetic. Your\ Athletic Board and Council have met faithfully for dis- cussion in your behalf, and I think that I may say ‘that the student. body “in toto” has co-operated admirably. For next year there-is much prom- ised. ~ Your new board is individually ‘and collectively a representative, un-— derstanding, intelligent and remarakbly | competent group, and I have no doubt that your Council will be no less so, In their hands, arid in yours, Lanityositys+ There was little disSatis—. future of this association. organism forever creating and. dis-~ carding—it-is you; and ‘if it does not serve your ends it is not at fault— you are! & quality to exist. The competition for the scholarships for foreign women is. still greater. Last. year the Faculty Committee found itself faced with the nearly hope- less task of making five awards among over fifty candidates. All of these students ‘met our academic require-- ments and almost all were recom- mended, after a personal interview, by the Institute of International Educa- tion, who now co-operate with us in finding suitable candidates for our fel- lowships. The awards for next year will not be made until May, but judg- ing from the number of applications that are already in, the committee will again have the opportunity to choose among ‘many excellent young women in their-own universities, wish, like the good migrating students of all coun=— tries and of all times, to see new methods. of hunting knowledge. - With a group, then, that promises to’ — furnish academic distinction and va- riety of_experience, Radnor will open __ ‘its first 3 year as a graduate hall. one of the foreign ‘correspondents of ® Nt ae & igi E COLLEGENEWS ® gag rs ‘ Page ‘is + on - Wilde -’ Continued from the First Page Im: cdiately upon his arrival in Ton: “don he made’ Himself” ‘famous by appear ing in “plum-colored velvet coat, _knee- - breeches, a silk shirt, with a turn-down - ‘collar, and a loose floating tie of exotic shade, “and he carried a lily or a sun- ‘flower in his wanderings. Punch seized ' ‘the opporftinity ‘to cartoon him, “his head attached to a huge sunflower on’a table,” with a suitable inscription beneath. In 1881 his first volume appeared, and in spite of ruthless treatment at the hands of the critics—Punch called it “Swit- burne and Water”—four editions were published in a month. g\fter this suc- .. cess Oscar Wilde visited America, and astounded the country by his remarks on his disappoiritment in the majesty of the Atlantic and in Niagara Falls, where, he said, “every American bride is taken,” and which niust be “one of the earliest, if not the keenest, disappointments in American married life.” At his lecture in Boston a group of Harvard students appeared in outlandish costume, each adorned with a sunflower and a lily. Os- car Wilde was in moderate dress, and he confounded the men utterly by offering them a ‘statue of a Greek athlete for their gymnasium. ' On his return to England, his peculiar affectations had been thrown aside, and his futher career, although of great“lit- erary importance, fails to have interest for us in relation to Patience. Miss Carey closed with a quotation from Holbrook Jackson summing up Oscar Wilde as a “dandy of intellect, dandy of manners, dandy. of dress,” “for ever telling him- self an eternal tale in which he himself is hero.” Glee Club *. \ Continued from the First Page The_ production _ was chagacterized_ by fineness of touch and perfection of de- . tail. Cast and choruses were whole- hearted. in their enthusiasm, and their unstinted effort resulted in smoothness and harmony. of preseftation. Every one, scenery and costume committees, actors, coach, and particularly Mr. Wil- “loughby who gave unlimited time. to transposing parts and training the sing- ers, is to’ be congratulated on an artistic and. finished production. The cast: a Colonel Calverley, Louise Evers, 732; Officers of Dragoon Guards: Major Murgatroyd,;-Kate Hirschberg, ’30; Lieu- tenant the Duke of Dunstable, Angelyn Burrows, 731; Reginald Bunthorne, a fleshly poet, Helen Bell,.’31; Archibald Grosvenor, an Idyllic poet, .Adele Mer- Sy *30:; ‘Mr. Bunthorne’s solicitor, Eliz- beth Perkins, - 30; Rapturous Maidens: ah Lady Angela, Rosemary Morrison, 30; the Lady Saphir, Helen Stevenson, ’31;.the Lady Ella, Constarice” Sullivan, 30: the Lady Jane., Sadie. .Zeben,..°31; Patience, “a a dairymaid, Agnes Howell, ¢ Conductor and Musical Director’ F. H. Ernest: Willoughby, A. R. M. C.; Direc- tor, Percy W. Edmunds; Chorus ‘Aciom- panist, Vernon A. Hammond. i Act I. Interior of* Castle Beilhlofne. Act II. A Glade. ; ,Book Review | This Poor Player. Shirley Watkins. (Macrae-Smith Co.) As a-rule, first novels may be modified by some one adjective, as “promising,” “poor,” or “pleasant”—and the reviewer need feel no pangs from a conscience which calls him back to do more jus- tice to the book. Not so, This Poor Player, first novel of the Philadelphian, Shirley - Watkins. This book commands attention, and a great deal of the atten- tion which it has received since its re- cent publication has been migre than favorable. The life of Alexanter Bigiey, phi- losopher, writer, “a veryi.: promising young man—by profession” written into. this book. iif his: life, how- ever, which’ interest$ us so: “very much. Miss Watkins has caught the ‘Character of the man upon a very setisitive plate, and she has developed it with a keen sense of touch. External, things are made to count for little; the reader. is never quite sure just where:a good deal of the action is laid. It is an atmos- phere, an environment, which Miss Wat- kins, so admirably creates. Her writing is, somehow, comparable té the paint- ings of Monet. A vague, hazy image ‘| gives ‘the feeling. of reality far more than do the sharper outlines of a less skilled pen or brush. Dialogue which is not idiomatic, and which rarely imitates real conversation, ‘gives deeper knowledge of a character. than would the trite . re- influence of the. great Russians. of last century has. left its mark upon this modern woman. The point of attack, the importance of character analysis, the very populous background ‘of life,--all seem to hark back to such stiiguished teachers:—* * = Birney, touched with a light spot of genius, lives the tragic nightmare of struggling to keep up faith in himself, of eternally justifying himself (often un- necessarily) before the world. He talks remarkably well; he charms people, and he has a-convincing, though seldom last- ing, method of logic. He is intelligent, ‘and he works hard; withal, he is dubbed charlatan by the worldly sophisticates ¢ A. = es PAO PAE — BE AEB 2 S ——— oy BAL BEA “AAO PIE See SOLD AT THE BETTER SHOPS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD LES PARFUMS IN — METAL CASES Dainty marvels of ein —perfect for the purse. Quarter ounce flacons in platinum-toned - i= SS eae Noes i oc eae CO anflnan’ 7 ee oe Sa ee ma aS cases. =—s ODEURS L’ORIGAN “PARIS,, CHYPRE EMERAUDE L’AIMANT LAROSE JACQUEMINOT $1.50 STYX—$1.75 JASMIN DE CORSE - $2.25 * ; ~ Refillable with mia. ¥% oz. flacons > DE WF WE WE WE IIE WE Parr EN ee — with whom he confts in contact. Some never react to the first impression of his magnetism; others understand his faults, and are still drawn within the circle of his admirers. great general treatises on subjects philo- sophical, progress little beyond their mere beginnings, born as notes collected in a thick portfolio. He dies hoping to complete his book, feeling, as always, that there is still time. — Birney is the one chief .character who makes for unity within the book. He wanders into the lives of many people, and those with whom he makes close contacts are a varied lot; each is drawn with the clear, strong, and comprehend- ing stroke which marks the draughts- manship in the chief figure of the book. All add to the feeling of rich background arid .of atmdgphere which pervades the whole. Geyer, friend of the college days; Charlottg, who loves Birney and understands him well; Charles, the fickle Epicurean; Séixas, the cynic, and the exotic and wealthy Elize are all among this number. Sometimes we feel that their parts loom a bit too great in pro- portion to their: actual importance~ in the development of the novel; often we feel that they are too. haphazard, that they, should be more closely knit to one another, in order to add unity to the book. Apparently we are- wrong, for “afterwards they dispersed. None of them seemed to know each other, and each of them went a separate way.” Birney, the tie that bound, was dead. The book Kas ‘its faults, but it also has. its fascination; it is more tgan usually worth reading. We are fortunate Transient Rooms: In spite of faith and help,” Birney remains a failure to the end. His |. WHITEHALL LANCASTER PIKE, HAVERFORD, PA. (On Tue Lincotn HicHway) The: Beautiful Main Line Suburb, just Outside Philadelphia Dining Room | in having, in the new book, room, an autographed copy " This Poor Player. ' EB. S..& ‘News From Other Colleges Are Against Prohibition Some doubt is cast upon the claim. of a prominent-dry leader several weeks ago, that the colleges are predominantly in favor of prohibition by the Stanford Daily’s recent straw vote. Student ar- ticles, a host of letters-to-the-editor and much undérgraduate discussion’ prepared the way for the ballot. A majority of the eight hundred and twenty students who cast their ballots do not believe that prohibition has been a, success; and while they favor retention of the amendment they would repeal the’ Volstead Act, be- lieving, presumably, in some form of modification. While the students of Mr. Heover'l alma mater voted against prohibition, the senior class at Columbia College, New York—the heart of -the “nullification” district—voted 88 to 38 in favor of it— The New Student. FORDHAM LAW. SCHOOL WOOLWORTH BUILDING y NEW YORK | ee CO-EDUCATIONAL Case System—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 Garage on Premises THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL . DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE A Professional School for . College Graduates The Academic Year for 1929-30 Opens Monday, October 7; 1929 - HENRY ATHERTON Frost, Director 58 Church St., Cambridge, Mass. at Harvard Square Escondido The Pack Trip Camp for Older Girls Season 1929: June 26-July $8; July 24—August 20 ms College girls! Why not spend four weeks of your vacation in. the mountains of New co? An unusual opportunity for @ small up to camp in the color Southwest. P Write for Particulars oe AGATHE DEMING 924 West End Avenue NEW YORK CITY The Peter Pan Tea Room 835 Lancaster ’Avenue COTTAGE TEA ROOM Montgomery Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Luncheon Dinner Tea Special Parties by Arrangement. Guest Rooms Phone, Bryn Mawr 868 . +-marks—-of—actual—life:-We—feel-that--the}——-*-~ Speaking of silver linings When the hair-dresser lets you bien on the ave of aparty... and your new shoes don’t come : vs and the youth is Unavoid- ably Dsisined ...and it’s rain- ing... . then, oh then, what sweet consolation there is in a Camel ; -. a cigarette just. so downright good that no grief can prevail against it! © 1929, ‘RK. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., W instoa-Salem, N.C. _ Continued from the First Page “the spirit of. man is the candle of the Lord.” Man may become , ‘a re-" vealing centre for good, and the ‘heart ~@f mysticism is that some of man is’ ’ kindred to the Eternal Spirit. Search Must Be Independent The laboratory in the last hundred years has given us an entirely new, ‘universe, a universe of invisibles, It turns our attention to the discovery of a deepet universe. We must make the same progress with our own spirits, as we do with atoms, but we have not gone at it with any like energy’ or technique. This new basis of life will mean the beginning of another, kind of civilization, even lay. the. foundations until we have |< an overwhelming conviction of our relatiom, to God. If we started build- ing a bridge from both banks of a river at once, it» would illustrate the hit-or-miss way we set about to build our. lives. “We are hike tittle children together a jig-sa®’ puzzle when. . Our. first business is to find the pieces. We must find God by our owns spiritual putting several ‘pieces are lost. experience; we depend a great deal on the testimony of others and have little idea strengthens our convictions, society Suppose and did not have knowledge of acquaintance. very how much ~ we lost alf contact with ‘it, e testimony of ‘others. is _ always precious if good, but we must have our. own testimony. New, _Intelligent’ Interest Shown ~—F-think we are going, to have a new era of this type of religion. I went to Smith College on the worst night of-the winter and had as my.audience between Last week at Wellesley I spoke seven and eight hundred girls. to six hundred girls, and one girl even : lit a cigarette lighter and took notes ip the dark. and would not have ‘happened five This happens all over years ago. I have all kinds of evi- dence that there is a fresh interest in this sort of thing. A number of. oc- currences came about originally to turn-our_church of -God—from- outside to the inside of our lives. The Copernican revolution established .a new centre for the cosmic system. Almost no one realized its effect upon every one’s spiritual outlook. All thought of heaven as. a crystal dome and believed that God was sitting above .on top.of the dome. It was easy to picture heaven as a perfectly definite place, but now God is not crystallized to us, and up is: down. “Twinkle, twinkle, litile star, I-know exactly what you are: An incandescent ball of gas Condensing to a solid “mass. . “Twinkle, twinkle, little star, I need, not wonder what you are, For seen by “spectroscopic ‘ker You’re helium and hydrogen.” we Plato and Aristotle .conceived the stars as pure and divine material, but we have got to look somewhere else for God—not in the sky. ‘The lab- oratories have been making” the. in- visible universe a mighty universe of “energy, aid the ultimate reality of the universe is found to be more like our spirits than anything else in the universe. Tennyson felt that our lives are drawn from.an unbounded deep; we are coming back to such thoughts. But the universal energy must be re- vealed through adequate instruments. This life can be just as certainly an illustration of spiritual energy as a “trolley car is of electric energy, and as soon as there is-an-organ there is ‘a means for light to break through. _ At Cheddar Cave in England there are amazing- stalactites lit up in a blaze of electric light. In a box out- side is the skull of an ancient cave- man. The tragedy of being a caveman was that he could not know of or see ——“the ‘stalactites. “Weare nearly—like: cavemen: we do ‘not even use. our more to see centres of illumination, to see “the candles of the Lord” to be lighted; I want religion to over- brim and to be real in its spiritual plenitude. jand science. and we cannot; Jand the college then retired to the | organ of-revelation. I want more and|_ May Day Continued from the First ie the general who. is. an authority on’ everything that ‘has happened. since then seems just a little ‘unreal. In the same way the graduate students are happy in worlds of their own; and they will make real contributions to: the advancement of human knowledge The scholar is happy to’ live in a small world made for -her- self, and confidence in’ her contribu- tion buoys her up when .the work’ seems exhausting and! the material dull. A ¢ Mrs. Manning then announced the list of “scholarships, after which hoops were presented in a drizzling rain, its books. Soa? Prog A Graduate Scholarships Coniferred for ~ 1929-1930 DEPARTMENT OF GREEK—Belinda Estelle Snow, of Raynham Centre, Massachu- sets, A.-B.,- Brown:-University,..1926, and A..M., 1928. Instructor in. Latin, Putnam High School, Conn., 1928- 29, DEPARTMENT OF batiChariotte Eliza- ‘beth Goodfellow, of Coatesville, Pennsy]- |’ vania. A. B., to be conferred, Mount Holyoke College, 1929. Emily : Eldredge: Grainger, Hampton, New York. ‘A. B., Brown University, 1928. of East Elizabeth ‘Braddock Weber, of Bridge-. ton, New Jersey. A. B., to. be conferred, Barnard Col- lege, 1929. DEPARTMENT OF ENGI 18H—Felen: Mar- jorie Pascoe, of Indianapolis, hidiina.* * A. B., Butler University, 1927. Gradu- ate Student in English and Philos- - ophy, Bryn Mawr College, 1928-29. | DerpartMEent.or—-FrENcH—Edna—€aro- line. Frederick, of South Hadley Falls, Masachusetts. A. BB, Teacher of French and ‘Latin in the High School, Millerton, N. Y., 1927- 29. Lena Lois Mandell, of Worcester, Mas- sachusetts. A. B., to be conferred, versity, 1929. DEPARTMENT OF. SPANISH—Portia. Ger- aldine Webster, of. Pittsburgh, Petirisy!- vania. A. Boston Uni- B., Pennsylvania . College bay Women, 1927; M: A., University of Pittsburgh, 1928. Louise Larrabee, of St. Louis,’ Missouri. 1927; M.°‘A., University .of. Pitts- burgh, 1928. — Louise Larrabee, of St:-Isouis, Missouri. A356 be conferred, Washington University, 1929, DEPARTMENT OF GERMAN—Irene Maria Huber, of Dorf, Switzerland. A. B.. and. M.. A.,° to -be conferred, | Barnard College, 1929. : DEPARTMENT oF History — Elizabeth | Kissam Henderson, of Noroton, Connec- ticut.. A. B., Bryn Mawr College, 1924; M.: A., 1925. Graduate Scholar in History, Bryn Mawr College, 1924- 25, and Fellow: in. History, 1928-29. UEPARTMENT oF S$ocrAt’ Economy, Ca- ROLA WOERISHOEFER SCHOLARSHIPS— Elizabeth Ross Foley, of Hamilton, New York. : A. —B.,-to--be-conferred,- Oberlin Col- lege, 1929. Ruth Enalda_ Shallcross, Nebraska. A. B., to be conferred, University of Nebraska, 1929. DEPARTMENT OF — SOCIAL Economy, GRACE Dopce ScHOLARSHIPS—Burta May Beers, of Stockton, California. A. B.; to be conferred, College of the Pacific, 1929. Ruth Murray Clinard, of High Point, North Carolina. A. B., to be-cenferred, North Caro- lina College for Women, 1929. Margaret Agusta Figge, of Silver Cliff, Colorado. A. B.,*to’be conferred, Colorado Col- lege, 1929. ; DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOG y—Dorothy A.. B., to. be conferred, University” of Kansas, 1929. DEPARTMENT oF ARCHAEOLOGY—Katha- rine Shepard, of New York City. A. B.,. Bryn Mawr College, Graduate Scholar in Classical Archaeology, Bryn Mawr College, 1928-29. . i Ann Marie Héskin, of Akron, oie A. 'B., to be conferred, Oberlin Col- lege, 1929.. enciit DEPARTMENT OF “Matiematics— Mary L. Gilbert, of “Straughn, “Indiana. A. B.,-Eartham--Gollege, -1928.--Earl- ham College Scholar, 1928-29. Ruth Margaret Peters, of New Cumber- land, Pa. A. B., Bryn ‘Mawr. College, 1928. gineering Department, Bell Tele- phone Company,. 1928-29. DEPARTMENT OF land. B. S., Women’s Collage University of | ~“Detaware-(to-be- conterred), 1929: ‘Sigman G. VALENTINE SCHOLARSHIP IN SorcaL Economy—Lois Mae Haridsaker, of Portland, Oregon. Ot merry Reine sewer A. B., Reed College, 1927. Visitor, St. Louis Provident Association, 1927-29, en nee _tf = : m ee Fe ees Sa ap ee a mind with a feeling of mastery. Mrs.’ + Maa::'e illustrated how completely one can’ become absorbed in his or her studies by citing the example of the War of 1812, and declares that Mount Holyoke College, 1927} of Bellevue,’ Jean Shaad, of Lawrence, Kansas)". 1928. ‘Force Adjusting Work, Traffic En-| CHEMISTRY—Elizabeth | THECOLLEGENKWS Penn Coucece ScuoLanssita—Kather ine Mary Ragen, of Oskaloosa, Iowa. A. B., to be conferred, Penn College, 1929, 5 by te SpectaL TRAVELING FeLLowsHips—Mary Katherine Woodsworth. A. B.,.1924,.and.M. A., 1927, Mawr. ; Margaretta Salinger. ° B., 1928, Bryn Mawr. Bryn Resident Fellowships Conferred for 1929-1930 : Latin—Aline Lowise Abaercherli, of Cincinnati, Ohio. A. By University of. Cincinnati, 1927; M. oe Bryn Mawr College, 1928. Graduate Scholar. in Latin, Bryn Mawr College, 1927-29. Encuisu—Ruth Mulford Colting, Piedmont, California. ABs "Mills College, 1927. ‘ Graduate Student, University of California, *- 1927-28. Graduate Student in Eng- lish and Education and Apprentice Teacher, Thorne School, 1928-29. Frencu—-Mary Duke Wight, ot Ur- bana, . Tllingis. A. B., Smith College, 1926; M. A., to be. conferred, University of Illinois, 1929. ; GERMAN—Margaret Jeffrey, of thorne, New Jersey. A. B., Wellesley College, "1927. .: Stu- dent, University of Frankfurt am Main,. Germany, .1927-28. Graduate Scholar in German, Bryn Mawr College, 1928-29. History—Pauline S. Relyea, of Rome, New-York; A. .B., Smith Collegt, 1924. "Shidaat. Columbia University, Sunimer Ses- sion, 1927, and Chicago University, Summer Session, 1928. Teacher at Thorne’ School and Graduate Stu- dent, Bryn Mawr College, 1927-29. Economics AND Poritics—Grace Evans Rhoads, of Moorestown, New Jersey. A. yn Mawr College, 1922. Stu- dent, Columbia University, summer, 1925: at the—Institute of Higher: In- ternational //Studies, Geneva, 1928. Teacher of. English, Rosemary Hall, of Haw- Greenwich, Conn.,, 1922-24; and Wilmington Friends’ School, Wil- ._ mington, Del. 1926-2 Assistant Warden of esdrotee Hall. ‘and Graduate Student, Bryn. Mawr Col- lege, 1928-29. SocraL_EcoNoMy AND SocraL Besrasce: —Julia Anna Bishop, of Abilene, Texas. A. B., Abilene Christian College, 1924; CONTINUED ON THE FIFTH PAGE School of Nursing of Yale University A Profession for the | College Woman — ‘interested in the modern, scien- tific agencies of social service The twenty-eight months course, .pro- viding an intensive and varied experi- ence through the case study methods, leads to the degree of BACHELOR OF NURSING Present student body includes gradu- ates of leading colleges. Two or more pi ers of approved college work re- quiredfor~ admission. —A~ few —scholar- ships available for students with ad- vanced qualifications. : The educational facilities: of Yale University are open to qualified stu- dents. For catalogue and information address The DEAN The SCHOOL of NURSING of YALE UNIVERSITY. NEW HAVEN :: CvANECTICUT AFTER COLLEGE—WHAT? « THE DREXEL INSTITUTE ‘ LIBRARY SCHOOL .~ oférs” a one-year course for college graduates. The degree. of B.S. in L.'S. is granted. - : Philadelphia HENRY B. WALLACE Caterer and Confectioner | 22 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr Breakfast Served Dally Business Lunch, 60c—11 to 2.30 Dinner, $1.00 Phe te B. M. 758 Open Sundays THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. CAPITAL, $250,000.00- Does a General Banking Business Allows Interest. on Deposits College Inn and Tea Room Caters especially for you, 1 to _ 7.30 week days and Sundays, 4 to 7 Saturday Gpen at 12 for Early Luncheon ies to 7.30 Fox’s Glacier Mints We import them from England ee : a eae 50 0 Cents a Jar at all Good Stoves or from _ MRS. JOHN KENDRICK BANGS DRESSES we Mon‘tcomery sda heal BRYN MAWR, PA. A Pleasant Walk from the Col- lege with an Object in View 2 PHILIP HARRISON 828-880 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr > Walk Over Shoe Shop Agent for ° GOTHAM GOLD STRIPE SILK STOCKINGS ° HENRY W. Haverford Pharmacy - PRESS, P. D. PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS , Phone: Ardmore 122 PROMPT DELJVERY SERVICE Haverford, Pa. ‘ JOSEPH TRONCELLITI Cleaner and Dyer ~- “ Wearing Apparel :: Blankets :: Laces ° Curtains :: Drapery CLEANED OR “DYED STUDENTS’ ACCOUNTS We Call and Deliver _ 814 Lancaster Avenue ‘ BRYN MAWR 1517 sponsored by There is no miore of college oF return Prize ANNOUNCING A $3.000.00 COLLEGE NOVEL CONTEST COLLEGE HUMOR DOUBLEDAY DORAN ovocative field of life'in America - today than the co lege. College men and women are sifting, experimenting, and thinking more boldly than any other group. They are building the new America. The Campus Prize Novel Contest is open to all college viloogendbustes, of to gtaduates of not more than one yeat. The prize novel may be a story of college life, or people in other environments; it may be your personal story or, the novel you always have ‘wanted to write about your generation. A $3000.00 ~~ ‘Cash prize will be paid the winning author. Thewinning novel will be serialized in College Humor and published im book form by Doubleday, Doran and Company. Book royalties will be paid the author in addition to the prize, and motion picture and dra- matic rights will remain with the sak the right to publish in serial and. book form, according to the usual terms, any of the other novels submitted. The closing date of. the contest is midnight, October 15, 1929. The contest will be judged by the’editors of College Humor-and Doubleday Doran. Typed manuscripts of from 75,000 to 100,000 words should be sent with ostage, name, and address, to the Campus ovel Contest, College Humor, 1050 La Salle Street, Chicago; or to the Campus Prize Novel Contest, ‘Doubleday, Doran and Co., Inc., Garden City, N.Y. IDOUBLEDAY DORAN ‘AND COLLEGE HUMOR or. We reserve * )! i vee \3 \)) tf ae " a: uy | Yh iH 4M 1 ws Hi) ) - the Jewel of England Unrivalled in the starry crown of England’s attrac- * tions stand’ York, the show city of the North. York .--of the Roman. legions, Saxon adventurers and Danish Kings. York with its hundreds of vivid episodes of history... rollicking Tudors, bold Eliza, bethans and gallant Cavaliers. : Dominating this scene of greatness stands the sub- lime cathedral . ; . glorious York Minster... England’s treasure house of stained glass. To contemplate this 1,300 year old temple, with its Jesse window, Five - Sisters window and lofty vaulting, is a sight ever to be remembered. | _Up and down:the entire East Coast of England are countless points of exquisite beauty and interest for Americans. Lincoln, Cambridge, Peterborough, Durham and Ely. mB, Write for free illustrated guide No. 6, ; containing many delight ful trips i J: KETCHAM, Gen. bal 31 Fifth Ave. N.Y. Thos. GC. Fluke Company 1616 CHESTNUT ST., PHILA. — and North Eastern Railway = OF ENGLAND AND SOGTIANR.. é . a e FELLOWSHIPS Continued from the First Page . " nea oe ae . ag: Sa Mi Bes bilt University, 1926.. vate e in High Schdols, 1924- 25 and 1926-28. Grace Dodge Fellow in Social Economy, Bryn Mawr _ Col- lege, 1928-29, CaRoLA WOERISHOFFER Jennette Rowe Gruener, Masachusetts. A. B. Wellesley. College, 1923; M. x. 1925. Teacher. of Physics and Mathematics,’ Greenwich Academy, 1925-27; Teacher of Biology, Fitch- burg High School, 1927-29. . Stu- dent, Harvard University, 1928-29. SoctaL Economy AND SociaL RESEARCH —Frieda Wildy, of Boulder, Colorado. A. B., University of Colorado, 1928. Carola. Woerishoffer Scholar, Bryn Mawr: College, 1928-29. Gaaak Donvce FrLLowsHips — Rosalie Williams, of Stockton, California. A. B., College of the Pacific, 1918. Carola Woerishoffer Scholar in So- cial. Economy, Bryn .Mawr College, * 1928-29. BrBLicAL. LITERATURE — Mary: Evelyn Oliver, of Bath, Maine. SA B., Mount Holyoke College, 1926. Student, University of Vienna, sum- mer, 1928. Instriictor -of Biblical Literature, Wheaton College, Nor- ton, Mass., 1926-28. Psycuotocy—Mary Broughton Small, of Montclair, New Jersey. BP. ew | Goucher College, 1928. Scholar in Psychology; Bryn Mawr College, , 1928-29. Epucation—Olivia Futch, of Adachuas Florida. - A. B. and M. A., Florida State Col- lege for Women, -1927. Teacher of English and Latin, High School, 1927-28; critic teacher of English and Latin, Florida Demonstration School, Florida State College, 1928- 29. ARCHAEOLOGY—Virginia. R. Grace, New York City. A. B., Bryn. Mawr’ College; 1922. Teacher, Wadleigh - High School, New. York, 1923-25; and at. Brear- ley School, 1925-26. Student, Amer- ican School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1927-28. Fellow in Greek, —Bryn*Mawr-—College;-1928-29,—____ Matwincasice Clie M. Hughes, ‘of Maidstone, Saskatchewan, Canada. A. B., University of Saskatchewan, 1925, M. A., 1926. Instructor in Mathematics, University of Saskat- chewan, 1926-28. Fellow in Mathe- matics, Bryn Mawr College,°1928-29. GrbLocy—Louise Kingsley, of Bingham-" ton, New .York. « A, B., Smith . College, 1922; M.A. 1924. Assistant in Geology, Smith ~~ College, -1922-24,--and“Instructor ir Geology, 1924-27. Fellow. in Geol- ogy, Bryn Mawr Colege, 1927-29. Brotocgy—Ona M. Fowler, of. North Adams,. Michigan. tee A. B., Hillsdale College, 1918; M. S., University of Michigan, 1919. Teacher of Biology: and. Chemistry, High School, Hacksville, Ohio, 1919- ' FELLOWSHIPS— of Fitchburg, 21,-and_at_the Synodical Junior Col-, lege, Fulton, Mo., 1921-26. Gradu- ate Student and Assistant in Zool+ ogy, University of Michigan, ~1926- 27,.and summer of 1927; Instructor in Zoology, Lake Erie College, 1927+ 28. Scholar in Biology, sas Mawr College, 1928-29. Undergraduate Nothinations for Scholarships, 1929-30 . Alumriae Regional. Scholarships OHIO: : Katherine Lena Sixt, of East Cleve- ~~ land, Ohio. “Prepared by the Shaw High School, . East Cleveland. Alumnae’ Regional Scholar, . 1928-29. ' “Honor points, 64 on 47 hours. EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA: _Angelyn. Louise Burrows, of . New York: City. Prepared by thé Ship- ley School, Bryn Mawr. Alumnae Regional. Scholar, - 1927-29.:~-Honor - points, 55 on “45 hours. Frances Swift Tatnall, of Wilming- ton, Del. Prepared by the Hebb’s School, Wilmington, Del. Franées Marion Simpson Scholar, *1927-28. , Alumnae Regional Schol- ar, 1928- 39. Honor points, 93 on 48 hours. Elisabeth. Roberts Barker, town, Pa. Prepared by the West- town School,. Westtown, Pa. Alum- nae Regional Scholar, 1928-29. Hon- or points, 11 on 15 hours. ILLINOIS: Margaret Eleanor Bradley, of Brook- line,’ Massachusetts. Prepared by . Hayes Court, Kent, England, and Misses | of Norris“ : ; a THECOLLEGENEWS Bist : Page 5 « nee New England States, 1928.- Alum- nae Regional Scholar, _ 1928-29. Henor points, 27 on 15 hours. NEW JERSEY: = Yyornne Gis *Sameren, of Prlncstor: New Jersey. Prepared -by Miss Fine’s School, Princetén. Alumnae Regional Scholag, 1928-29. Honor |. peints.: 13 on 16 hours. NEW YORK: * ; ‘Phyllis Dorothea Wiegand, of New York City. Prepared ‘by. St. Aga- tha’s, New York. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1926-29.. Major, German. Honor points, 129 on 75 hours. Dorothea Eckfeldt Perkins, of New York City. Prepared by Miss Fine’s Schggl, Princeton, N. J., and Dai- ton. Academy, New York City. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1928-29. ; Honor points, 33 on 16 hours. MISSOURI: Anne Elizabeth ‘Burnett; of St. Louis, Missouri. Prepdred. by the John Burroughs School, St. Louis, Mo. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1928-29. Honor points, 25 on 15 hours. Emily Westwood Lewis Memorial Scholar- -oghips Melody Byetley, of Kansas City, Mis- s souri.” Prepared by the Westport High School, Kansas- City, Mo. Spe- cial Scholar, 1928-29. Honor points, 19 on 16 hours. Candidates for Scholarships for the Sophomore Year MARIA Hopper ScHowmrsHir : ‘ Jane Elisal@th Sickles, of Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared by the Hughes“High School, Cincinnati. Honor points, 30 on 15 hours. Seconp .Marta Hopper SCHOLARSHIP :” Patricia Hill Stewart, of Norwalk, Ohio. Prepared by the Norwalk High School and the Columbus School for Girls, Columbus, O. Matriculation Scholar for the West- ern. States, 1928. Honor points, 28 on 15 hours. Frances Marton ‘SHIP: Elisabeth Luciemay Hannah, of Nor- ristown, Pennsylvania, ‘Prepared by Friends’ Select School, - Philadelphia. Frances Marion Simpson Scholar, 1928-29.. Honor points, 27 “on 16 hours. - | James E. RHOADS. SCHOLARSHIP: Eleanor ‘Gertrude George Renner, of Brookline, Massachusetts. Prepared by the Girls’ Latin “School, Boston, Mass..‘Honor points, 27 on 15 hours. Book SHop SCHOLARSHIP: Alice Writcomb Rider, of. amaica Plain, Masachusetts. : Anne Elisabeth Burnett, of St ouis,; Missouri. AsBy Brayton DurFEE SCHOLARSHIP: Pauline Huger, of Sumter, South Car- olina. Prepared by the Bryn Mawr School, Baltimore, Md. Honor points, 24 on 16 hours: Book SHop SCHOLARSHIP:.- Patricia Putnam, of Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Prepared by ‘the Lee School, Boston, Mass. Honor. points, 24 on 16 hours. : LEILA’ HOUGHTELING MEMORIAL SCHOL- ARSHIP: Charlotte Tyler, of Chestnut Hill, Pa. Special Scholar, 1928-29. Honor points, 24 on 16 hours. Scholarships to Be Held in the Junior Year James E. Ruoaps SCHOLARSHIP: Enid Appo .€ook, of Washington, ‘D.-C.- Prepared by the Dunbar High School, Washington, D.. C., and by Howard University. Maria Hopper Sophomore Scholar, 1928-29. Honor points, 111 on 46 hours: Mary E. Stevens ScHoLarsuip (award- ed by the President) : Simpson’ ~SCHOLAR- Celia Gause Darlington, of Brookline, z “Sunday, May 12, -at 7:30 P. M.,, Massachusetts. ‘Tuomas H. Powers. MemoriAL ScHOL- ARSHIP: Ida Louise Raymond, of Springfield, Massachusetts. Transferred from the University of California. Major, English.*: Honor points, 99 on 60 hours. + ANNA HALLOWELL MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP; Blanche Worthington, of Forest Galites Pennsylyania. Prepared by the -Doylestéwn High School and °the George School, Pa. James , E. Rhoads Sophomore Scholar, 1928-29. Honor points, 98 on 47 hours. ANNA Powers, MEMORIAL ~~ SCHOLAR- SHIP; Frances Swift Fatnall, of Wilmington, Delaware. CONSTANCE Lewis” MEMORIAL SCHOLAR- SHIP: Virginia Burdick, of Hampton, Con- necticut. Prepared by the High ‘* School, - Hartford, Conn. Alumnae |- the Winsor School, Boston, Mass. Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1928-29. | Honor points. 35 on 16 hours. Hester Aun Thomas, of Highland Park, Illinois.: Prepared by the Deerfield-Shields High — Highland Park. Alumnae Regi Scholar} 1928-29. Withdrew ary 1. 1929. : NEW ENGLAND: Dorothea Cross, of Fitchburg, Massa- ‘chusetts. Prepared by the Fitch- . burg High School. Alumnae Re- gional Scholar, 1926-29; Maria Hop- per Sophomore Scholar, 1927- 28: Mary E. Steyens Scholar, 1928-29: Major: Chemistry. or Biology. --Honor_ points, 162% on 75 hours: Celia Gause Darlington, of Brookline; Massachusetts. _ Prepared, by the Brimmer —School> _ Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1927-29; - Maria Hopper Sophomore Scholar, 1928-29. Honor points, 10714 on 45 hours. Alice 4 ao Rider, Plain, Massachusetts. Prepared by . the Girls’ Latin —Sc*ool, ‘Mass. Matriculation Sch: lar for the of Jamaica lee ae School, onal | anu- | Boston, Mass. |. Boston, |: 1927-28; Special 76 Regional Scholar, Scholar, 1928-29. Honor points, on 47 hours. Book SHop SCHOLARSHIP: Betty Thomson Overton, of New York City... Prepared by Miss Chandor’s School, New. York City. Anna Pow- ers Memorial Scholar, 1928-29. Honor points, 72 on 47 hours. | Book SHop SCHOLARSHIP: Elizabeth Doak, of Germantown, Penn- sylvania. Prepared by the German- town Friends’ School. 69 on 47 hours. FRANCES MARION SiMPSON SCHOLAR- SHIP? : ee : Helen Maxwell Stevenson, of Phila- delphia. Prepared by the West Philadelphia..High School for Girls and the Agnes Irwin - School. Phila- delphia. _ Francés Marion Simpson | gan, who is very‘influential in France, Honor points, The Fencing Finishes, ~The final r id of the College Fencing” "Tournament willbe held on Thursday night in_ the gymnasium.at°8-o’clock: Every- one is invited. The meet will open with a ‘grdnd salute,. fol- lowed by two final Junior, and three final Senior matches. There will also be exhibition bouts by Mr. Boeckmans with three guests from the Philadel- ye — phia Sword Club in foil, epee and sabre, DULLES. — Continued from the First Page Allies feel that this clause is a threat of non-payment from Germany, but at the same time there is a_ feeling Pthat the time has come for German sovereignty of policy. Under the Dawes plan there are an- ‘nuities of Six hundred million a year; the allied memorandum asks for five hundred million a year for sixty-two years after the war... Germany has offered four million a year, but Dr. | Dulles noted in the~ paper~thismorn= ing that Mr. Young has drawn up a memorandum compromising on four hundred and fifty million a year. A compromise has also been made on the transfer problem; the payments are to be nade in two sections: one, irre- spective of the effect on the ex- change; the other only if the exchange will be unaffected. | France gets more than half the an- cision really rests on her, and the po- litical ‘situation ‘within her borders | tends to make her inflexible. She could flourish without trade with: Ger-_ many, whereas England, very depend- ent. on’ foreign trade, could not. ¥ Mr. Young hds come to terms. with Germany, and in a way this takes some of the responsibility off Ger- many. cept the memorandum, and it is hoped that she will.do so, since Mr. Mor- is advising it. Gilbert reported a clean bill of finan- cial health for Germany, but Dr. Dulles declared this an cunggdrenon;s der normal, the taxes are heavy, there is political unrest, and the borrowing in the United States cannot go on. In conclusion, Dr.. Dulles said that she feels that even if France accepts the amount at four hundred and fifty million. dollars, there will have to be an even greater reduction. CALENDAR Saturday, May 11, at; 9AM, the ‘German Language Examination will ‘be held in Taylor Hall. ae The Varsity Tennis team . will play Vassar at Poughkeepsie. the last musical service of’ the Bryn Mawr League will be held in the Music Room, Goodhart. person. 4 telligent, fhuities, so the responsibility of the de-|- It:remains for France to ac-| ' The press has made out ‘that Mr. for the production is still a little un-.. Going Which Way? *.Some joker in the New Hampshire Legislature. has* proposed a_ license fee for—hiteh-hikers- -amounting to. -$5.50.per According to newspaper re- ports, another measure was also proposed that would require them to display two headlights and a tail light when travel- ing at night. Ma “When it becomes a crime,” complains The ‘Dickinsonian, student newspaper of Dickinson . College, “for a clean-cut, in- honest college boy to ask a passing motorist for the means to get to his home and parents. during a brief vacation period, then it is time to ques- tion the discretion of degislative bodies.” —Vassar News. Highway Wayne Hotel isivw Large and newly ‘furnished rooms for transients. . American. plan ania room. Gril may be rented for dances, dinners, social affairs. Lincoln ~ BRINTON BROS. —EE —— FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES . Orders Called for and Delivered... Lancaster and Merion Aves. Bryn Mawr, Pa. — Telephone 638 William -T. McIntyre . Main Line Stores Victualer Candy, ice Cream and Fancy Pastry Hothouse Fruits Fancy Groceries v 821 LANCASTER AVENUE Mawr TEA, DINNER ; Open Sundays Ff [| CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE] 835 Morton Road Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185 WILLIAM L. HAYDEN BUILDERS and HOUSEKEEPERS Hardware ' 838 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR, PA. i LUNCHEON, eum ( ~ —, — VANITY - BOOT SHOP wn. | Ceca Shoes 11 West 5oth Street, New York The Latest Uogue in Spring and ° Summer —€mstomede———_— Footwear ENNIS NN ENN ENN ENN EN ERIN ONO b { WILL EXHIBIT AT C ollege Inn WEDNESDAY MAY 14 TUESDAY “MAY 15. BAAN AARAAARAAAS eae 3 Editions in.3 Weeks WINGS of WAX A Novel by JANET HOYT America today. nom-de-plume. ‘ would stand investigating.” Price $2.50 “Can this be true?” is the question asked by all who read this powerful novel of co-educational college life It is written by a former member of the faculty of a great co-educational university under a in “Portrays the social life of a great Co-University with a superb vividness—Daring in its exposal.” Columbia Spectator. “"WINGS OF WAX’ is. sufficient evidence thae our. Universities Oberlin: Review. “There isn’t a ‘thing in ‘WINGS OF WAX" which does’ not - happen many times in every college.” Brown Daily Herald. You who.know, read it.and see if it touches you on the raw, “Get it now at your local bookstore or from __nasium, garden pa Scholar,” 1927-29. Honor poimts, 5t on 47. hours. Book SnHop SCHOLARSHIP: Marianna Dun n Jenkins, of Ciaein’ nti, Ohio. Prepared by the Hughes High School, Cincinnati. _Honor points, 69 on 47 hours. CONTINUED ON THE SIXTH PAGE advance. ¢ PEND those WEEK ENDS ad VACATIONS at the a. W.A. CLUBHOUSE = New CLUB RESIDENCE for WOMEN offers the prices. Transient rooms $3 and $3.50 a day. Monthly rates. very room with private bath. Six roof. ae swimming pool, gym atio and many unusual features. In the theatre district and very. eccessible to > all eee: wasaned ‘Reservations to be made in in. Monday, May 12, the Hampton Quar- * tet will sing, at 8 P. M., in Good- J. H. SEARS & CO., Publishers, 114 East 32nd St., N.Y. hart Hall. fs : best at reasonable | 353 WEST 57th STREET ~ 2 NEW YORK CITY _ ADDRESS Ae A Ae te in. De te sa" Page 6 Aa ' @ a % THECOLLEGEN ‘EWS Novel Contest Receives Work Student y Re i *. Prepared. by the. Brearley School,| Honorable , ention—Katherine Batch, : : i A German ie F ellowships New York City. Matriculation] - of Jamaita Plain, Massachusetts. . Little Adverse Criticism Looks at America Continued from Page Five ‘Scholat for New York, New Jersey | Grorce Bates Hopxins MEMORIAL Sgme of the points of view expressed ': ————_—_——_—_ o" : *By Mr. Bertrand C. Bertram. Scholarships:to Be Held in’ the ‘Maryland. Prepared -by the Shipley School, Bryn Mawr. Major, His- SCHOLARSHIP IN MusIc: ae Sadie Sylvia Zeben, of Philadelphia,- E. th |, ncaa tory. . Honor “points, 216,0n 75| Prepared by the Philadelphia High : ; ° is ore 3 - ‘ A ° Ss. : — . ee e --@n--the-subject--of .a--contest.such-.as.that |... (NOTE: Mr, Bestram, is om Sug Aitecre-“Ricakeme MuMonac ScHotaw: Tar Steecan Kupoy Menontai. School fot Girls.. Philddelphia High ‘ad recently announced for writers of campus novels are very interesting. College Hu- mor courageously questioned. various people as to their reactions ‘to this sort dreds of German students who have past few years, under the auspices of the German Work Student Associa- labored in American industries in the. sHip (awarded ‘by the President): Anne Elizabeth Wood, of Washington, D. C. Prepared by. Holton-Arms School, Washington, D.C. James E. Rhoads Junior Scholar, 1928-29, Major, ‘Economics and _ Politics. ScHOLARSHIP int English, awarded each year on the recommendation of the De- partment of English to the student who does the best work in the advanced Eng- lish courses. Constance Hand, of New York City. School Service Club Scholar, 1927- 28. Honor points, 76 on 46 hours. Seconp Grorce Bates Hopkins MeEmo- RIAL SCHOLARSHIP IN Music: Margaret Eleanor Bradley, of Brook- line, Massachusetts. = of thing, and some of their replies are, at, tiofi.; Two ‘hundted German. work Honor points, 166 on 76. hours. and Delaware, 1926-27. | Major, Se aa A : Mary ANNA LonGstRETH MEMORIAL ‘ Greek: Honor points, “198 on. 73 least, amusing: arenene are now studying American Shuveabaiee havior e Pie : Said Sinclair Lewis: “I am sorry, but| industry as laborers and twenty Amer-| Elizabeth -Robison Baker, of Fulton,| CHartes S. HINcHMAN‘ MEMORIAL J S I think that the whole project of your ‘offering a large prize to college stu- dents for a novel is about as bad a thing for them as could be conceived of. I youngster in college than to receive such a prize.” 2, -_. “For one, I'm S. ‘Cobb: Said Irvin ican students are occupied -in Ger- many.) like I am an engineer, and, my American workers; wanted to know American life. I shall, never forget the moment fellow-students, I wanted to come-in: ~ ean think of nothing more ruinous to a j touch. with American industry and Missouri. Prepared by the Synodi- cal’ College, Fulton, Mo. James -E. Rhoads Sophomore § Scholar, 1927- 28; Thomas H. Powers Memorial Scholar, ~ 1928-29. Major, Chemis- try. Honor points, 159 on 78 hours. EvizaBetH ‘WILson WHITE MeEmMortIAL SCHOLARSHIP . (awarded by the Presi- dent) : trated-booklet giving full information. JULIAN S. BRYAN Valley Ranch Eastern Headquarters 70 East 45th Street, New York, N.Y, A vacation experience you Will “never forget. A ngenial group; excellent food, cooked by the best des in the West. Return in great shape for school East and for illus- Claf The Adobe Shade of Tan Suede with Tan Russia Foxings . ens 1606 Chestnut al ‘ society's )\chosen .ways. — Lightweight welt sole—neat lin— AtLastan Oxford Trig and Natty Invites you’ to saunter along Very high arch for this 134- inch covered Cuban ~ heel. asa turn—holds its shape and can be resoled. a iiave-athy tn Piiladalptile. “44 f “teal hygs This indispensable “warm * weather” Frock is of crepe georgette. Easy to pack and a joy to wear. The V-yoke meets a_ horizontally ‘tucked bodice extended into slim hip lines—so slenderizing! Bright navy and black; also sports -paste!s ; corn yellow, p2rvenche blue, shell pink, tulip green, , ‘sunburn beige,~and- white. < stg Unusual at $39.50 MANN&DIL KS PHILADELPHIA — / / so /